Electronic – How does this circuit diagram work

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I don't understand this circuit diagram here, but I'm sure that you can help me out.
I'll explain what I have figured out so far.

EDIT: It's a metronome circuit. Sorry for being unclear about that.

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  1. In every circuit, current tries to connect "ground" (-) and "+9 VOLTS" in this situation.
  2. From the top down, 9 volts of current is waiting at the emitter side of Q2 (transistor). I'll get back to that.
  3. On the left, the voltage is tuned down a bit by the R1 , then after it is a variable resistor (R2).

I am lost here. I know that R2 controls how fast C1 charges, and I know that at a certain point C1 will trigger Q1 and Q2 to release the 9 volts (see 2). This 9 volt burst creates the clicking sound.

What I am confused about is:

  1. Why does C1 need to be directly connected to the speaker?
  2. Doesn't some of the current from R2 go to Q1?
  3. How does the capacitor discharge? I imagine that the capacitor will slowly charge up to a point, then let it out (presumably to Q1). When does it let out? Why does it stop it's "charging" routine to discharge?
  4. Doesn't Q1's base run straight to ground? Why is it going to Q2?

Best Answer

CircuitLab allows you to simulate this:

schematic

simulate this circuit – Schematic created using CircuitLab

Open the circuit, click on "simulate," and figure out how it works yourself! Note that I had to simulate the inductance of the speaker (important in this circuit) by inserting a series inductor, as CircuitLab didn't include this in the speaker model.

Separately, the reason the capacitor is connected to the speaker's "top" terminal, rather than ground, is that it needs to see the voltage drop across the speaker, which fluctuates with both how the speaker conducts, and how Q2 conducts; this is what keeps the oscillation going. If the capacitor was connected directly to ground, there would be a single click, and then it would be silent.

Specifically, when Q2 is open, the voltage across C1 will drop to 0 (it will discharge.) But, as C1 discharges, it turns from an isolator to a conductor (a discharged capacitor works a bit like a wire; a charged capacitor works a bit like an isolator.)