| Reference | Value | Notes | |-----------|-------|-------| | U1 | NE555 | Timer IC | | U2 | LM393 | Dual comparator (one used) | | D1, D2 | 1N4148 | Fast switching diodes | | D3 | Red LED | Fault indicator | | D4 | Green LED | Pass indicator | | C1 | 100nF | Ceramic disc | | C2 | 10nF | Polyester | | C3 | 100µF / 16V | Electrolytic | | C4 | 10pF | Ceramic (critical) | | R1 | 10kΩ | 1/4W | | R2 | 1kΩ | 1/4W | | R3 | 100Ω | 1/4W | | R4 | 1MΩ | 1/4W | | R5 | 47kΩ | 1/4W | | R6 | 10kΩ | 1/4W | | R7 | 330Ω | 1/4W | | R8 | 220Ω | 1/4W | | RV1 | 10kΩ trimpot | Calibration | | Lx | Coil under test | External connection | | Power | 9V battery (or 9-12V DC) | Regulated recommended |
The coil under test (Lx) and C2 (10nF) form an LC tank. When the pulse ends, the energy stored in the magnetic field of Lx collapses, causing the tank to resonate at its natural frequency: ( f = \frac12\pi\sqrtLC ). blue ring tester schematic diagram exclusive
Many online copies of this schematic incorrectly label C4 as 100pF. Our analysis shows that 10pF is correct for the 100kHz-500kHz range. Using 100pF dampens the ring too quickly. Part 2: How the Blue Ring Tester Works – The Physics of Ringing To truly appreciate this circuit, you must understand the ringing test principle. The Concept of Q Factor Every inductor has a quality factor (Q). When you strike a good inductor with a short current pulse, it rings—producing a decaying sine wave. The number of cycles before the signal decays to 37% of its initial amplitude is proportional to the Q factor. | Reference | Value | Notes | |-----------|-------|-------|