Search results for "board c"
SparkFun SparkFun Power Delivery Board - USB-C (Qwiic)
The Power Delivery Board uses a standalone controller to negotiate with the power adapters and switch to a higher voltage other than just 5V. This uses the same power adapter for different projects rather than relying on multiple power adapters to provide different output; it can deliver the board as part of SparkFun’s Qwiic connect system, so you won’t have to do any soldering to figure out how things are oriented. The SparkFun Power Delivery Board takes advantage of the power delivery standard using a standalone controller from STMicroelectronics, the STUSB4500. The STUSB4500 is a USB power delivery controller that addresses sink devices. It implements a proprietary algorithm to negotiate a power delivery contract with a source (i.e. a power delivery wall wart or power adapter) without the need for an external microcontroller. However, you will need a microcontroller to configure the board. PDO profiles are configured in an integrated non-volatile memory. The controller does all the heavy lifting of power negotiation and provides an easy way to configure over I²C. To configure the board, you will need an I²C bus. The Qwiic system makes it easy to connect the Power Delivery board to a microcontroller. Depending on your application, you can also connect to the I²C bus via the plated through SDA and SCL holes. Features Input and output voltage range of 5-20V Output current up to 5A Three configurable power delivery profiles Auto-run Type-C™ and USB PD sink controller Certified USB Type-C™ rev 1.2 and USB PD rev 2.0 (TID #1000133) Integrated VBUS voltage monitoring Integrated VBUS switch gate drivers (PMOS)
€ 34,95
Members € 31,46
M5Stack M5Stack Proto Board
PROTO board is used as a Core Extensions feature. Suitable with Arduino and ESP32
€ 7,95
Members € 7,16
HT641B Infrared Thermometer (–50°C to +600°C)
The HT641B is a very accurate infrared thermometer that uses a laser to measure the surface temperature of objects quickly and easily. The laser can be aimed at hot surfaces or moving objects, allowing the user to easily capture the temperatures being measured from a safe distance. The device is activated by a trigger and takes a precise temperature reading in a flash. Features High-precision measurements Adiustable emissivity High/Low temperature alarm LCD (Digital display backlit screen) 12:1 (Object distance ratio 12:1) °C/°F unit switch Data Hold Auto Power Off Low battery indication Back light control Laser light control Specifications Infrared temperature measurement –50~600°C (–58~1112°F)0~600°C (32~1112°F) Accuracy ±1.5°C (±2.7°F) Display Black and white screen (1.3") Laser circular measurement area indication Target distrance ratio 12:1 Tunable emissivity 0.10~1.00 Special range 8~14 µm Response time Operating temperature 0~40°C (32~104°F) Power supply 2x 1.5 V AAA Battery (included) Dimensions 147 x 96 x 39 mm Weight 96 g Included 1x HT641B Infrared Thermometer 2x 1.5 V AAA Battery 1x Manual
€ 24,95€ 14,95
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SparkFun SparkFun moto:bit - micro:bit Carrier Board (Qwiic)
Onboard each moto:bit are multiple I/O pins, as well as a vertical Qwiic connector, capable of hooking up servos, sensors and other circuits. At the flip of the switch, you can get your micro:bit moving! The moto:bit connects to the micro:bit via an updated SMD, edge connector at the top of the board, making setup easy. This creates a handy way to swap out micro:bits for programming while still providing reliable connections to all of the different pins on the micro:bit. We have also included a basic barrel jack on the moto:bit that is capable of providing power to anything you connect to the carrier board. Features More reliable Edge connector for easy use with the micro:bit Full H-Bridge for control of two motors Control servo motors Vertical Qwiic Connector I²C port for extending functionality Power and battery management onboard for the micro:bit
€ 109,95€ 79,95
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SwiftIO - Swift-based Microcontroller Board
SwiftIO offers a full Swift compiler and framework environment that runs on the microcontroller. The SwiftIO board is a compact electronic circuit board that runs Swift on the bare metal, giving you a system that can be used to control all kinds of electronic projects. Features NXP i.MX RT1052 Crossover Processor with ARM Cortex-M7 core @ 600 MHz 8 MB SPI Flash, 32 MB SDRAM On-board DAPLink debugger On-board USB to UART for serial communication On-board RGB LED On-board SD socket 46x GPIO, 12x ADC, 14x PWM, 4x UART, 2x I²C, 2x SPI etc. Many additional advanced features to meet the needs of advanced users Zephyr RTOS support MadMachine IDE is the premier integrated development environment for SwiftIO, which makes it easy to write Swift code and download it to the board.
€ 74,95€ 59,95
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SB Components StackyPi - Raspberry Pi RP2040 based Board
StackyPi consists of standard Raspberry Pi 40 pins on its board for Raspberry Pi HAT. One can plug Raspberry Pi HAT by directly putting it on the StackyPi that has the power pins for the connection. StackyPi is a board on which, clear and descriptive pin labels make the process easier for the user. Features Dual Arm Cortex-M0+ processor 264 KB RAM DMA Controller Operating Voltage: 3.3 V GPIO / UART / SPI / I²C Pins: 40 Flash Memory: 64 MB Dimensions: 65 x 30 mm Downloads STEP File Product Dimension 3D PDF File Schematic File GitHub
€ 19,95
Members € 17,96
SparkFun SparkFun GPS-RTK2 Board - ZED-F9P (Qwiic)
The SparkFun GPS-RTK2 raises the bar for high-precision GPS and is the latest in a line of powerful RTK boards featuring the ZED-F9P module from u-blox. The ZED-F9P is a top-of-the-line module for high accuracy GNSS and GPS location solutions, including RTK capable of 10 mm, three-dimensional accuracy. With this board, you will be able to know where your (or any object's) X, Y, and Z location is within roughly the width of your fingernail! The ZED-F9P is unique in that it is capable of both rover and base station operations. Utilizing our handy Qwiic system, no soldering is required to connect it to the rest of your system. However, we still have broken out 0.1"-spaced pins if you prefer to use a breadboard. We've even included a rechargeable backup battery to keep the latest module configuration and satellite data available for up to two weeks. This battery helps 'warm-start' the module decreasing the time-to-first-fix dramatically. This module features a survey-in mode allowing the module to become a base station and produce RTCM 3.x correction data. The number of configuration options of the ZED-F9P is incredible! Geofencing, variable I²C address, variable update rates, even the high precision RTK solution can be increased to 20 Hz. The GPS-RTK2 even has five communications ports which are all active simultaneously: USB-C (which enumerates as a COM port), UART1 (with 3.3 V TTL), UART2 for RTCM reception (with 3.3V TTL), I²C (via the two Qwiic connectors or broken out pins), and SPI. Sparkfun has also written an extensive Arduino library for u-blox modules to easily read and control the GPS-RTK2 over the Qwiic Connect System. Leave NMEA behind! Start using a much lighter weight binary interface and give your microcontroller (and its one serial port) a break. The SparkFun Arduino library shows how to read latitude, longitude, even heading and speed over I²C without the need for constant serial polling. Features Concurrent reception of GPS, GLONASS, Galileo and BeiDou Receives both L1C/A and L2C bands Voltage: 5 V or 3.3 V, but all logic is 3.3 V Current: 68 mA - 130 mA (varies with constellations and tracking state) Time to First Fix: 25 s (cold), 2 s (hot) Max Navigation Rate: PVT (basic location over UBX binary protocol) - 25 Hz RTK - 20 Hz Raw - 25 Hz Horizontal Position Accuracy: 2.5 m without RTK 0.010 m with RTK Max Altitude: 50k m Max Velocity: 500 m/s Weight: 6.8 g Dimensions: 43.5 x 43.2 mm 2x Qwiic Connectors
€ 379,00
Members € 341,10
Get Started with the MAX78000FTHR Development Board
Build your own AI microcontroller applications from scratchThe MAX78000FTHR from Maxim Integrated is a small development board based on the MAX78000 MCU. The main usage of this board is in artificial intelligence applications (AI) which generally require large amounts of processing power and memory. It marries an Arm Cortex-M4 processor with a floating-point unit (FPU), convolutional neural network (CNN) accelerator, and RISC-V core into a single device. It is designed for ultra-low power consumption, making it ideal for many portable AI-based applications.This book is project-based and aims to teach the basic features of the MAX78000FTHR. It demonstrates how it can be used in various classical and AI-based projects. Each project is described in detail and complete program listings are provided. Readers should be able to use the projects as they are, or modify them to suit their applications. This book covers the following features of the MAX78000FTHR microcontroller development board: Onboard LEDs and buttons External LEDs and buttons Using analog-to-digital converters I²C projects SPI projects UART projects External interrupts and timer interrupts Using the onboard microphone Using the onboard camera Convolutional Neural Network
€ 32,95
Members € 29,66
LILYGO LILYGO T-Journal ESP32 Camera Module Development Board (Normal Lens)
The T-Journal is a cheap ESP32 Camera Development Board that features an OV2640 camera, an antenna, a 0.91-inch OLED display, some exposed GPIOs, and a micro-USB interface. It makes it easy and quick to upload code to the board. Specifications Chipset Expressif-ESP32-PCIO-D4 240 MHz Xtensa single-/dual-core 32-bit LX6 microprocessor FLASH QSPI flash/SRAM, up to 4x 16 MB SRAM 520 kB SRAM KEY reset, IO32 Display 0.91" SSD1306 Power indicator lamp red USB to TTL CP2104 Camera OV2640, 2 Megapixel Steering engine analog servo On-board clock 40 MHz crystal oscillator Working voltage 2.3-3.6 V Working current about 160 mA Working temperature range -40℃ ~ +85℃ Size 64.57 x 23.98 mm Power Supply USB 5 V/1 A Charging current 1 A Battery 3.7 V lithium battery WiFi Standard FCC/CE/TELEC/KCC/SRRC/NCC (ESP32-chip) Protocol 802.11 b/g/n/e/i (802.11n, speed up to 150 Mbps) A-MPDU and A-MSDU polymerization, support 0.4 μS Protection interval Frequency range 2.4 GHz~2.5 GHz (2400 M ~ 2483.5 M) Transmit Power 22 dBm Communication distance 300m Bluetooth Protocol meet bluetooth v4.2BR/EDR and BLE standard Radio frequency with -98 dBm sensitivity NZIF receiver Class-1, Class-2 & Class-3 emitter AFH Audio frequency CVSD & SBC audio frequency Software Wifi Mode Station/SoftAP/SoftAP+Station/P2P Security mechanism WPA/WPA2/WPA2-Enterprise/WPS Encryption Type AES/RSA/ECC/SHA Firmware upgrade UART download/OTA(Through network/host to download and write firmware) Software Development Support cloud server development /SDK for user firmware development Networking protocol IPv4, IPv6, SSL, TCP/UDP/HTTP/FTP/MQTT User Configuration AT + Instruction set, cloud server, Android/iOS app OS FreeRTOS Included 1x ESP32 Camera Module (Normal Lens) 1x Wi-Fi Antenna 1x Power Line Downloads Camera library for Arduino
€ 29,95
Members € 26,96
Pimoroni Picade X HAT USB-C
Turn your Raspberry Pi into a retro games console! Picade X HAT includes joystick and button inputs, a 3 W I²S DAC/amplifier, and soft power switch. This HAT has all the same great features as the original Picade HAT but now has no-fuss female Dupont connectors to hook up your joystick and buttons. Simply pop Picade X HAT onto your Pi, plug a USB-C power supply into the connector on the HAT (it back-powers your Pi through the GPIO, so no need for a separate power supply), wire up your controls, and install the driver! It's ideal for your own DIY arcade cabinet builds, or for interfaces that need big, colourful buttons and sound. Features I²S audio DAC with 3 W amplifier (mono) and push-fit terminals Safe power on/off system with tactile power button and LED USB-C connector for power (back-powers your Pi) 4-way digital joystick inputs 6x player button inputs 4x utility button inputs 1x soft power switch input 1x power LED output Plasma button connector Breakout pins for power, I²C, and 2 additional buttons Picade X HAT pinout Compatible with all 40-pin Raspberry Pi models The I²S DAC blends both channels of digital audio from the Raspberry Pi into a single mono output. This is then passed through a 3 W amplifier to power a connected speaker. The board also features a soft power switch that allows you turn your Pi on and off safely without risk of SD card corruption. Tap the connected button to start up, and press and hold it for 3 seconds to fully shutdown and disconnect power. Software/Installation Open a terminal and type curl https://get.pimoroni.com/picadehat | bash to run the installer. You'll need to reboot once the installation is complete, if it doesn't prompt you to do so. The software does not support Raspbian Wheezy Notes With USB-C power connected through Picade X HAT you'll need either to tap the connected power button or the button marked "switch" on the HAT to power on your Pi.
€ 24,95€ 19,95
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LILYGO LILYGO T-Display-GD32 RISC-V Development Board
LILYGO T-Display-GD32 RISC-V Development Board Specifications Chipset GD32VF103CBT6 FLASH 128 kB SRAM 32 kB On-board clock 108 MHz crystal oscillator Working Voltage 2.7 V - 3.6 V Button BOOT - RESET LCD ST7789 1.14" IPS 240 x 135 USB to TTL CP2104 Modular interface TIMER, UART, SPI, I2C, PWM, ADC, DAC, CAN, USBOTG Working Temperature Range -40 ~ +85°C Weight 10 g Size 51.49 mm x 25.2 mm x 10 mm Peripheral Button, RGB LED, SD slot, LCD Power Supply Input USB 5 V @ 1 A Charging Current 500 mA Battery Input 3.7-4.2 V USB USB-C Downloads GitHub
€ 22,95
Members € 20,66
Elektor Digital Mastering the I²C Bus (E-book)
Mastering the I²C Bus takes you on an exploratory journey of the I²C Bus and its applications. Besides the Bus protocol, plenty of attention is given to the practical applications and designing a stable system. The most common I²C compatible chip classes are covered in detail. Two experimentation boards are available that allow for rapid prototype development. These boards are completed by a USB to I²C probe and a software framework to control I²C devices from your computer. All samples programs can be downloaded from the 'Attachments/Downloads' section on this page. Projects built on Board 1: USB to I²C Interface, PCA 9534 Protected Input, PCA 9534 Protected Output, PCA 9553 PWM LED Controller, 24xxx EEPROM Module, LM75 Temperature Sensor, PCA8563 Real-time Clock with Battery Backup, LCD and Keyboard Module, Bus Power Supply. Projects built on Board 2: Protected Input, Protected Output, LM75 Temperature Sensor, PCF8574 I/O Board, SAA1064 LED Display, PCA9544 Bus Expander, MCP40D17 Potentiometer, PCF8591 AD/DA, ADC121 A/D Converter, MCP4725 D/A Converter, 24xxx EEPROM Module.
€ 29,95
Members € 23,96