PIC16F628A Programmable Digital Timer
- Raj Bhatt
- http://www.embedded-lab.com
- 42.484 Views
- moderate
- Tested
Programmable relays find use in numerous automation applications such as automatic street light control, watering and pump control, HVAC, home automation, power plants automation in industries, etc. This article describes how to build a fully functional, one-channel programmable relay switch using the PIC16F628A microcontroller. It allows you to set both ON and OFF time. The maximum time interval that you can set for on and off operations is 99 hours and 59 minutes. Another interesting feature of this project is it offers cyclic option, which means you can choose to run it in a continuous loop of ON and OFF cycles. The device can be programmed through 4 push switches. The programming menu and device status are displayed on a 16×2 character LCD. The timing resolution of this relay timer is 1 minute. The timer also saves the user inputs to its internal EEPROM so that it can retain these values after any power supply interrupt. Here are the summary of the features that this timer device has:
- Microcontroller powered timer switch
- OFF and ON time setup for the relay operation
- Option for cyclic run
- ON/OFF timing range: 0 to 99 hours and 59 minutes
- 1 minute timing resolution
- Interactive user interface using 4 tact switches and a character LCD
- Buzzer alarm
- On-board +5V voltage regulator
Circuit diagram
The hardware part of this project is very simple. The entire circuit runs off a regulated 5V power supply derived using the popular LM7805 linear regulator chip (Figure 1). To minimize the heat dissipation in the voltage regulator, the recommended input DC voltage to LM7805 is 9V, which can be easily obtained from a DC wall adapter. Diode D1 (1N4001) is used for reverse polarity protection in the circuit. S1 is a slide switch for turning the power supply on and off.
Figure 2 depicts the input and output setup. There are five tact switches in this project: one for microcontroller reset, and four for user inputs. The four input switches are named as Menu/+, Select, Enter, and Start/Stop. Their functions will be described in the software section. The status of the 4 input switches is read by the PIC16F628A microcontroller through ports RA2, RA3, RA4, and RB0. The output LCD is a standard HD44780-based display and is driven in 4-bit mode. The pin assignments for the LCD data and control signals are shown in Figure 2. S2 is another slide switch that allows manual control of the LCD backlight.
The output relay switch is driven through a NPN transistor (2N2222). The project also includes a DC buzzer that beeps when the relay switch changes its status. The relay and buzzer circuits are shown in Figure 3.
The PIC16F628A microcontroller runs at 4.0 MHz using an external resonator. The I/O pins of PIC16F628A, the resonator connection, and the in-circuit serial programmer (ICSP) header are shown in Figure 4.
Figure 1. Regulated +5V power supply unit
Figure 2. I/O circuit with PIC16F628A pin assignments
Figure 3. Relay and buzzer control circuit
Figure 4. PIC16F628A resonator and ICSP header connections
The PIC16F628A pin assignments for the LCD, switches, relay and buzzer circuits are listed in the following table.
The following figure shows the complete relay timer circuit soldered on a general-purpose prototyping board.
Software
The programmable relay timer gets inputs from the 4 push buttons. Their functions are described as follows:
Menu/+ : This button allows you to navigate between various menu options such as ON time setup, OFF time setup, and Cyclic option setup. These options are displayed on the LCD. This button also serves as digit increment during time setup. The time is set in HH:MM format, which gives the minimum value of timing interval to be 1 min.
Select : This allows you to choose a displayed menu option as well as individual hour and minute digits. The selected digit is incremented by 1 when Menu/+ button is pressed.
Enter: When the appropriate hour and minutes are set, pressing the Enter button finalizes the time. The Cyclic option is also entered using this button.
Start/Stop: This push button is to start and stop the timer. If the timer is already on, you can stop it at anytime during its operation by pressing this button.
Now let’s see how it works. Suppose, the relay switch is needed to be turned on after 15 minutes for 10 minutes. This means the OFF time is 15 minutes and ON time is 10 minutes. Once the timer is started after entering the above times, the device will be turned on after 15 minutes and remained on for 20 minutes. After that it will be turned off again. If the Cyclic option is selected to 1, the timer will run in a loop and after another 15 minutes of OFF time, the relay will be turned on for next 10 minutes, and so on.
The firmware for this project is developed using mikroC Pro for PIC compiler from mikroElektronika. The time keeping is achieved using the Timer 0 module built inside the PIC16F628A. The Timer0 interrupt is enabled and run with 1:256 prescaler value to create a precise 500 ms (half-second) duration. The colon symbol between HH and MM digits blinks at 1 Hz. The half-second delay is looped 120 times to construct a minute-duration. You can download the complete project files including the source code and compiled HEX file in the attached file.
Photos
The following video shows the timer device in action.
Keynotes:
- The function of the buzzer is to notify the user with a beeping sound whenever the relay is switched on and off.
- In case of power failure, the timer will retrieve the user selected ON and OFF times from the EEPROM. But the timer will be stopped and won’t run until the user presses the Start
- All circuit diagrams used in this project are original and drawn by the author using the EasyEDA schematic editor. EasyEDA is a free online CAD tool for circuit layout, PCB design, and simulation.
Author: Raj Bhatt (electronics enthusiast, and hardware maker, and founder of Embedded Lab; visit my Tindie store)
- Embedded Lab (http://www.embedded-lab.com)
- Visit my Tindie store (https://www.tindie.com/stores/rajbex/)
- Keynotes: EasyEDA (http://www.easyeda.com)
Respect sir
please give me the HEX file.
The HEX file is inside the zip file RelayTimerV4_mikroC_Software.zip in the download above.
So how to buy this timer auto on of project.how much cost price send me .
Srenusrenu10@gmail.com
Sir
i not able to get. Please send me
for 16f84A style >>
https://youtu.be/UNCwUTqopOo
Any one have PCB for that?? 🙂
There is no PCB available for this project.
Which program kit uses in this project
You can use a PICkit 2 or PICkit 3 programmer available widely online.
very nice and functional device, I use this device half year and works without mistake,Thank You very much!
Hello , I programmed the PIC with the Hex file in the ZIP folder but it does not work. I tried another Hex “RelayTimerWithLCD3” is it works. Did you use the Hex in the zip file?
Yes,dear Joe, I use Hex file in the zip file- 10KB.You must use PIC 16F628A with 4Mhz crystal.I wish you all the best,
Thank you , It was just LCD-E and LCD-RS that are inverted in RelayTimerWith LCD3 with one time programming. This is et nice project because allowing cyclic timing.
Sir ,your project 100% working
Sir.1to 200 cycle repeats changing options program tell me sir
sir please tell me how to change the on and off time in the programm
The ON-OFF time is adjusted using the push-buttons on the device. What are you looking for?
Thank you , all work !!
Sir i want ON time in sec and OFF time in minutes. Is it possible if yes than what will be the changes required in program.
Timing resolution for this timer is 1 minute. To modify the code for seconds resolution you have to study the code and modify it accordingly. This can’t be answered on this comment.
Where is the coding for this programme ?
The assembly code is on the zip file above.
Hello. Thank you for posting this. How do I change the minimum programmable time from 1 min to 1 sec.
Hi, The current firmware doesn’t support 1sec resolution. It will be needed to edit the source code that is attached on the downloads above. Otherwise you may try to contact the author for possible help.
Dear Sir,
Its work fine Hours:Minutes correctly, but i need Minutes:seconds resolution,so please let me know where I change(in your code) the value for Min:Sec resolution.
Best regards.
Kamal.
Respected,
does this configuration have a limited cyclic range per 100 cycles?
Thank You,
please, someone answer me
I don’t understand your question. Please be more descriptive.
Dear Mike,
if we set this timer to the option Y = 1 – cyclical ON and OFF, does it automatically stop working after 100 cycles, or continue indefinitely after 100 cycles?Thank You, for interesting for this subject.
Regarding this question, i would suggest to email the author at admin @ embedded-lab.com and let us know the outcome here.
Sir, will you please send a detailed bom of that project
You will have to compile your own BOM from the schematic above. It is not available.
Dear Mike, what do You think about building one more relay instead buzzer on this Timer ? On This Timer V4 will be two relays.Thank You for Your opinion,
Regarding,
Michal Gasparovic
You are free to modify the schematic with a second relay. It will be connected the same way as the first one but in a different MCU output.
Thank You very much dear Mike. You are right about two relays on this Timer V4, but I am not able to make new softwer for this new configuration of this Timer with two relays.Could You Please, dear Mike, write new softwer for this device? Maybe in HEX file?
Greeting You, Mike,
Sorry, i will not be able to help in your code, as this is not my project. You may try to contact the author if he can help.
How do we contact the author? He lists 2 email addresses on his embedded-lab.com page but answers neither. He has a Tindie page but also has not answered there either..except to sell the pc boards. Also I have tried several times to post comments in his
https://embedded-lab.com/blog/another-programmable-relay-switch-using-pic-mcu/
page which is this same project I think. Anyway I have tried to post comments there but they never get approved by the moderator so they never actually get posted.
How can I help you?
I am trying to understand the code and modify it so this is a seconds and minutes timer rather than a minutes hours timer. I do not know PIC very well. I thought TMR0 or Timer0 would be set then I could just divide by 60 but TMR0 appears to be a register and it just gets accessed. I see it gets set to 39 by default and counts to 255 then resets to 39. How can this be changed to display seconds and minutes rather than minutes and hours?
Thank you.
Dear Sir ,
thank you for the code. But As i am trying to run in MP lab there are lots of erro are present So Sir can You Give me header file which are required for project
I am having trouble understanding the code. I need a 1 second to 59 minute count down timer. I do not see Timer0 in the source. How do I change this code or your other count down timer project’s code to allow it to count down from some seconds to 0?