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Posted

Hi.

How can the exterior (as in a yard) ambient light just after sunset be focused/directed to a photosensor in order to delay its action that turns on some lights at night ?

The sensing device is not adjustable for threshold of operation.

 

I have several plano-convex and bi-convex lenses; from 1" to 6" diameter. With a defined light source as the sun disc, focusing it to the photosensor is no problem -when coaxial- but with diffuse light it is another story.

 

Suggestions, please ?

Posted

you could maybe use a fisheye lense to gather light from a large portion of sky. its not going to be very efficient but really, there isn't a whole lot of light to be collecting.

Posted

Hi.

How can the exterior (as in a yard) ambient light just after sunset be focused/directed to a photosensor in order to delay its action that turns on some lights at night ?

The sensing device is not adjustable for threshold of operation.

 

I have several plano-convex and bi-convex lenses; from 1" to 6" diameter. With a defined light source as the sun disc, focusing it to the photosensor is no problem -when coaxial- but with diffuse light it is another story.

 

Suggestions, please ?

 

Amplify the photosensor -- turn up the gain. Your problem is more easily solved with electronics than with optics.

Posted

Hi.

How can the exterior (as in a yard) ambient light just after sunset be focused/directed to a photosensor in order to delay its action that turns on some lights at night ?

The sensing device is not adjustable for threshold of operation.

 

I have several plano-convex and bi-convex lenses; from 1" to 6" diameter. With a defined light source as the sun disc, focusing it to the photosensor is no problem -when coaxial- but with diffuse light it is another story.

 

Suggestions, please ?

I wanted to do the same thing and I solved the problem electronically.

 

 

The photosensor is probably a photoresistor. The more light that shines on it, the lower the resistance. All you have to do is lower the resistance, and that should have the same effect as shining more light on it.

 

The way I did this was to add another photoresistor in parallel. It's very quick and dirty but it worked adequately for me. I happened to have a few lying around. If you don't, you might try using a normal resistor, but I'm not sure how effective it would be. Or a variable resistor, or even a combination of several of these. Another photoresistor should be better because it behaves like the one that's already there (I suppose it's like doubling the surface area of the original photoresistor).

 

 

I also had the additional photoresistor outside of the main box so it could be tweaked by orienting it differently.

Posted

Nope on electronics adjustments :(

 

-----> www.fairchildsemi.com/ds/QS/QSE158.pdf

 

If no lensing is promising... Parabolic mirror could work. Thanks

Posted (edited)

You can effectively adjust its threshold by adding enough light (perhaps a tiny LED etc), thus tricking the device into believing that it's earlier in the evening. The man who taught me this sort of trick was the man who went on to invent an impedance-based method for controlled cryosurgery of malignant tumors.

Edited by ewmon
Posted (edited)

You could put another adjustable inline dusk-to-dawn sensor switch in the electrical path before the sensor/light. Your sensor/light won't come on until your new switch turns on at your desired setting. They don't seem expensive here in the UK.

 

http://www.lightingstyles.co.uk/Exterior-garden-lighting/PIR-detection-sensor-lights/Electronic_sunset_timer_switch.htm

Edited by StringJunky

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