Claims
- 1. A strobe circuit comprising:
a flashable source of illumination; a capacitor, coupled to the source, for providing energy for flashing the source; a multi-state charging circuit, coupled to the capacitor, for charging same; a control circuit, coupled to the charging circuit, wherein the control circuit switches the charging circuit through a plurality of states to minimize in-rush current, and wherein a duty cycle parameter is increased within a selected flash cycle.
- 2. A strobe circuit as in claim 1 wherein the charging circuit includes an impedance element, coupled to a switching circuit wherein the charging circuit in one phase provides charging current through the impedance and in another phase the impedance is by-passed providing a larger charging current.
- 3. A strobe circuit as in claim 1 which includes a power supply wherein the power supply limits in-rush current to the control circuit.
- 4. A strobe circuit as in claim 3 wherein the control circuit adjusts a duty cycle parameter of the charging current.
- 5. A strobe circuit as in claim 4 wherein the duty cycle varies over several charging cycles in response to selected feedback.
- 6. A strobe circuit as in claim 4 wherein the source is flashed in response to an applied multi-state control signal and wherein charging is inhibited during at least one state of the applied control signal.
- 7. A strobe circuit as in claim 1 wherein the control circuit includes circuitry for minimizing discharge of the capacitor in response to a predetermined condition.
- 8. A strobe circuit as in claim 7 wherein the predetermined condition comprises a selected input voltage.
- 9. A strobe circuit as in claim 7 wherein the control circuitry includes circuitry responsive to information carrying variations in an applied power signal sensed by the circuitry to minimize discharge of the capacitor in response thereto.
- 10. A method of limiting charging in-rush current in an electrical unit that has an energy storage capacitor which is periodically charged and discharged, the method comprising:
turning off charging current for a period of time; imposing a current limiting element and initiating a limited charging current of a first magnitude for a first time interval; establishing a charging current duty cycle, less than 100%; increasing the duty cycle in accordance with a preset schedule to charge the capacitor to a selected threshold; and discharging the capacitor and repeating the above steps during at least one subsequent charging cycle.
- 11. A method as in claim 10 which includes providing a periodic discharging signal during the discharging step.
- 12. A method as in claim 10 which includes varying the duty cycle in response to selected feedback signals.
- 13. A method as in claim 12 wherein the feedback signals are indicative of accumulated charge at the capacitor.
- 14. A method as in claim 13 which includes limiting a rate of increase of an internal voltage responsive to a switched, exterior applied voltage.
- 15. A strobe control circuit comprising:
circuitry for accommodating input voltages having on the order of 100% amplitude variation; circuitry responsive to a selected candela output for altering a charging parameter; and circuitry for minimizing a current in-rush thereto.
- 16. A strobe circuit as in claim 15 wherein the responsive circuitry includes a circuit for charging a capacitor to a selected voltage despite variations in the input voltage.
- 17. A strobe circuit as in claim 15 which includes a programmed processor having pre-stored indicia associated with a plurality of candela outputs.
- 18. A strobe circuit as in claim 17 which includes an output candela specifier.
- 19. A strobe circuit as in claim 18 wherein the candela specifier comprises at least one of a manually settable element, and an electrically settable element.
- 20. A strobe circuit as in claim 16 wherein the responsive circuitry includes circuitry for monitoring a capacitor voltage while charging same.
- 21. A strobe circuit as in claim 20 wherein a charging rate can be altered in real-time during respective charging cycles.
- 22. A strobe circuit as in claim 20 which includes capacitor charging circuitry with a variable capacitor charging rate.
- 23. A strobe circuit as in claim 22 which includes circuitry for varying the charging rate responsive to the time required to achieve a selected capacitor voltage.
Parent Case Info
[0001] This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/767,897, filed Jan. 23, 2001, entitled “Processor Controlled Strobe” and incorporated herein by reference; and also claims the benefit of the filing date of May 23, 2001 of Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/293,083, and entitled Processor Based Strobe With Feedback.
Provisional Applications (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
|
60293083 |
May 2001 |
US |
Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09767897 |
Jan 2001 |
US |
Child |
10040968 |
Jan 2002 |
US |