far2canadian
New member
- Location
- LA, California
Hi,
I have a (hopefully) very basic question here, coming from limited experience in electrical design work.
Is it possible to use a photosensor/cell as a dimmer, rather than a switch? I'd like to build a faux skylight, and to make the "faux" as realistic as possible, I'd like to have it dim through the day (and turn off at night). I could achieve this will a normal dimmer, but I'd rather not have to operate it manually. I also considered research a time based system that brighten and darken as the hours progressed, but I would need to adjust it throughout the year for summer vs. winter.
My ideal would be to use a photosensor to apply resistance to the circuit as the sun dims, and reduce resistance as the sunlight increases. Ideal light source would be LED or fluorescent. Is this possible?
Thanks.
I have a (hopefully) very basic question here, coming from limited experience in electrical design work.
Is it possible to use a photosensor/cell as a dimmer, rather than a switch? I'd like to build a faux skylight, and to make the "faux" as realistic as possible, I'd like to have it dim through the day (and turn off at night). I could achieve this will a normal dimmer, but I'd rather not have to operate it manually. I also considered research a time based system that brighten and darken as the hours progressed, but I would need to adjust it throughout the year for summer vs. winter.
My ideal would be to use a photosensor to apply resistance to the circuit as the sun dims, and reduce resistance as the sunlight increases. Ideal light source would be LED or fluorescent. Is this possible?
Thanks.