PIR and LED, continuously on as long as there is motion

Hello,
I am new to arduino and using it to make an art project. I have been familiarizing myself with PIR sensors but am wondering if there is a way when programming the PIR to have the light remain on continuously as long as there is motion, (currently it shuts off at the end of the designated time by the PIR sensor’s then immediately turns back on when someone if someone is still moving)
Currently I am testing it with an LED, when I move the LED turns on and wether or not I am moving the LED shuts off then back on, I would like to find a way to be able to compound the PIR High outputs so that as long as I am moving, the LED stays on, once i stop moving it can then shut off

This is the current set up I am working with using a tutorial from circuitmagic.com

Here is the code from circuitmagic


//the time we give the sensor to calibrate (10-60 secs according to the datasheet)
int calibrationTime = 30;        

//the time when the sensor outputs a low impulse
long unsigned int lowIn;         

//the amount of milliseconds the sensor has to be low 
//before we assume all motion has stopped
long unsigned int pause = 5000;  

boolean lockLow = true;
boolean takeLowTime;  

int pirPin = 3;    //the digital pin connected to the PIR sensor's output
int ledPin = 13;


/////////////////////////////
//SETUP
void setup(){
  Serial.begin(9600);
  pinMode(pirPin, INPUT);
  pinMode(ledPin, OUTPUT);
  digitalWrite(pirPin, LOW);

  //give the sensor some time to calibrate
  Serial.print("calibrating sensor ");
    for(int i = 0; i < calibrationTime; i++){
      Serial.print(".");
      delay(1000);
      }
    Serial.println(" done");
    Serial.println("SENSOR ACTIVE");
    delay(50);
  }

////////////////////////////
//LOOP
void loop(){

     if(digitalRead(pirPin) == HIGH){
       digitalWrite(ledPin, HIGH);   //the led visualizes the sensors output pin state
       if(lockLow){  
         //makes sure we wait for a transition to LOW before any further output is made:
         lockLow = false;            
         Serial.println("---");
         Serial.print("motion detected at ");
         Serial.print(millis()/1000);
         Serial.println(" sec"); 
         delay(50);
         }         
         takeLowTime = true;
       }

     if(digitalRead(pirPin) == LOW){       
       digitalWrite(ledPin, LOW);  //the led visualizes the sensors output pin state

       if(takeLowTime){
        lowIn = millis();          //save the time of the transition from high to LOW
        takeLowTime = false;       //make sure this is only done at the start of a LOW phase
        }
       //if the sensor is low for more than the given pause, 
       //we assume that no more motion is going to happen
       if(!lockLow && millis() - lowIn > pause){  
           //makes sure this block of code is only executed again after 
           //a new motion sequence has been detected
           lockLow = true;                        
           Serial.print("motion ended at ");      //output
           Serial.print((millis() - pause)/1000);
           Serial.println(" sec");
           delay(50);
           }
       }
  }

Thank you!

Post your code using code tags <code>
It didn't come out right

Just fixed it! Thanks!

In that case you shouldn't switch LED off Just PIR is low, but wait a small pause period.

Hi thank you for the response
Here is the original code which always turns the LED off based on the mechanical time adjustment on the PIR sensor

void loop(){ 

     if(digitalRead(pirPin) == HIGH){
       digitalWrite(ledPin, HIGH);   
     }
     if(digitalRead(pirPin) == LOW){       
       digitalWrite(ledPin, LOW); 
     }}

I tried to adjust this code so it follows your advice, but I am new to this and don’t think I interpreted your instructions properly
Here was my attempt, which now results in the LED staying on permanently once activated by the PIR

`    
void loop(){

 if(digitalRead(pirPin) == HIGH){
       digitalWrite(ledPin, HIGH);  
}
     if(digitalRead(pirPin) == LOW){       
       delay(1000);
}}

This topic was automatically closed 180 days after the last reply. New replies are no longer allowed.