Hi Andrew, agreed - sometimes simpler is more interesting to hear about
Just for fun, here's my scruffy non-digital firing box, constucted many years ago as a student:
I originally built this to fire Le Maitre pyro cartridges on stage for college plays, having realised that it would be cheaper than hiring the kit to do so. It requires three actions for safety to fire - keyswitch arm, channel select and fire. I've recently used it for shell testing and SFX tests.
A good investment for a beginner is the 100m reel of bell wire shown in the pic, about ?7.50 from Maplin. The total loop resistance of this reel is about 15 ohms, so with a 24v panel (like this one) you can reliably ignite a 1 amp match at 300ft range.
For a mains powered panel, there is no need to oversize the transformer - you can at least double the rated current output for a few seconds - enough time to fire a cue or two. 2 - 3 amps output will be fine. I do recommend 24v as a minimum though as it gives you the flexibility to use thinner, cheaper firing wire.
BTW - I have no intention at all to write 802.11g drivers for the digital system - I'll be using either the built in PIC serial comms functions with the RF Solutions kit, or the light weight IP stack from Microchip with OTS wireless hubs in bridging mode... My time is much better spent working on the fireworks
EDIT - Ninjaguy, Rule 1 of electric firing - Keep it simple and test, test and test again. Rule 2 - Take the batteries out and unplug from all power while rigging, whether wireless, wired, digital or whatever. Rule 3 - Trust your instincts - if you're not certain it's safe, it's probably not...
Edited by BrightStar, 18 September 2006 - 11:01 PM.