Battery powered motion sensor current draw?

K

K2

Guest
Do battery-powered motion sensors draw any significant current when no
motion is present? This is a Heath-Zenith wireless system (about $40)
that sends a signal to an indoor AC powered receiver when it detects
motion. I'd like to know exactly how these things work. No current at
idle?

How long might the sensor's 2 AA batteries last with an anticipated 3
or 4 triggers per day? Most would be false alarms from local cats. The
packaging says 1 year, but doesn't specify at what trigger rate - or
does that really matter? Thanks.

K2
 
Actually, you will find that the most false triggers are from wind, snow,
rain, etc.. I have the same units, and 2 years later, with tons of false
triggers, and the original batteries are still inside the units.
-Kim
"K2" <godwin@austin.com> wrote in message
news:vteog0de0jvfcbbt2jub40lng4m4ukftc1@4ax.com...
Do battery-powered motion sensors draw any significant current when no
motion is present? This is a Heath-Zenith wireless system (about $40)
that sends a signal to an indoor AC powered receiver when it detects
motion. I'd like to know exactly how these things work. No current at
idle?

How long might the sensor's 2 AA batteries last with an anticipated 3
or 4 triggers per day? Most would be false alarms from local cats. The
packaging says 1 year, but doesn't specify at what trigger rate - or
does that really matter? Thanks.

K2
 
On Sat, 31 Jul 2004 22:54:22 -0400, "Neil" <ksleep@sympatico.ca>
wrote:

Actually, you will find that the most false triggers are from wind, snow,
rain, etc.. I have the same units, and 2 years later, with tons of false
triggers, and the original batteries are still inside the units.
That's good to know.This will actually be in a sheltered area, blocked
by vehicles and aimed at one specific place where an intruder would
have to enter. I may also mask parts of the sensor to eliminate any
false alarms.

K2
 
"K2" <godwin@austin.com> wrote in message
news:vteog0de0jvfcbbt2jub40lng4m4ukftc1@4ax.com...
Do battery-powered motion sensors draw any significant current when no
motion is present? This is a Heath-Zenith wireless system (about $40)
that sends a signal to an indoor AC powered receiver when it detects
motion. I'd like to know exactly how these things work. No current at
idle?

How long might the sensor's 2 AA batteries last with an anticipated 3
or 4 triggers per day? Most would be false alarms from local cats. The
packaging says 1 year, but doesn't specify at what trigger rate - or
does that really matter? Thanks.
The sensor may draw significant current, but the circuit is activated
for a very brief time every second or so. So on the average, the
current drain is very low. Also, 2 AA batteries can supply a decent
amount of current; to see them in action check out a wireless optical
mouse. The mouse is constantly glowing red, even when not moving, and
the batteries last for a few months.

> K2
 
The sensor may draw significant current, but the circuit is activated
for a very brief time every second or so. So on the average, the
current drain is very low. Also, 2 AA batteries can supply a decent
amount of current; to see them in action check out a wireless optical
mouse. The mouse is constantly glowing red, even when not moving, and
the batteries last for a few months.

K2
The sensor itself probably draws very little current...though when an
event is detected, there is probably a decent pulse for the wireless
transmission.

A PIR sensor I'm working with now only draws about 5 uA by itself. Of
course, you have to do some processing and amplification. I'm trying
to get my microcontroller-based system below 200uA average.
 

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