This is a forum for the Broadcom WIFI/ARM combo board I was raving about last night: emw3165.com
And from the small world department, I just noticed this forum’s domain is registered in Asheville, North Carolina!
This is a forum for the Broadcom WIFI/ARM combo board I was raving about last night: emw3165.com
And from the small world department, I just noticed this forum’s domain is registered in Asheville, North Carolina!
This month’s meeting on the NCSU Centennial Campus will be back in Engineering Building I, room 1005: Meeting Details & Maps
Currently scheduled for this meeting:
The last part of the meeting will be the usual open forum and face to face networking. Bring your show and tell items, problems needing help, etc.
This month’s meeting will be at NCSU Centennial Campus Engineering Building III: Meeting Details
The August meeting will be in three parts:
The last part of the meeting will be the usual open forum. Bring your show and tell items, problems needing help, etc.
Just got this Aven 17010 Adjustable Circuit Board Holder from Amazon, but turns out it’s also Newark part 30Y9494. I love it already. Where has this been in my life? Etc. The above links show typical boards, but here’s a shot to show it works for the 40 cent OSH Park boards too:
This is a constant current dummy load made from one of Shane Trent’s PCBs like those given away at a recent TriEmbed meeting. As mentioned on the email list, this PCB is a “fixed” version of a design from a “Sleepy Robot” blog of a guy named Wittenberg, which is itself a derivation of an original design by Dave Jones of EEVblog. Wittenberg had made available gerbers for his design (in early 2012) that were unfortunately defective, and he didn’t allow for two way communication, forcing Shane to go to great lengths to correct the gerbers and get a run of PCBs fabricated. Shane’s blog article covers all this in depth and has a link to the corrected gerber files in zip format.
Fast forwarding to the present, here’s a recent tutorial by Dave going into depth about battery measurements. Viewers will just have to put up with the axe-grinding, horse-beating treatment of a “battery life extender” Kickstarter that pushed Dave’s buttons. Apart from this, it’s an excellent treatment and a fantastic “essential subset” spreadsheet tutorial for folks that just want a hint about how to do cool things like the graph-making done in this video.
I assembled and tested a second of the PCBs recently. It will sink up to one amp at up to around the 60 volt limit of the FET used (MTP3055VL) HOWEVER, unless you like to see magic smoke the 18 watt thermal limit of the FET/heatsink assembly has to be honored. So at a full ampere the voltage limit is around 18, and at that load be sure to avoid touching the transistor! At one ampere the shunt resistor will be operating at it’s rated dissipation limit and will also be very hot. To summarize, this load has to be kept at an amp or less and at 18 watts of power dissipation or less. (Note: the shunt resistor is temporarily 5{13079d06258ef9010cea88dee32f3cdfc6f216a54651010f7303ce6140ee927c} tolerance due to an ordering blunder. That will be fixed.)
I’ve decided to make it available for borrowing by TriEmbed meeting attendees who can guarantee it’s return by them or their designee at the following month’s meeting. The transistor is not expensive and it won’t be any big disaster (just embarrassing) if it’s accidentally destroyed, but blowing the traces off the PCB will be frowned upon (joke). So this (and perhaps some of the TriEmbed contact cards Paul made, hallway signs, etc) could be part of a shared resource that could expand over time.
The “UI” is currently two voltmeter test points, with the unit showing the load current as a one to one mapping from amperes to volts. A digital display with simple USB serial (current and “external voltage” aka battery voltage) logging output and some temperature compensation/auto-calibration is planned, but it would be straight forward to tie the test points to something like an Arduino analog pin or two.
Remotely controlling and/or making the current limit programmable would be a bit harder, but a properly coordinated hack to provide an alternative control mechanism would be OK with me and make for a fun project for somebody.
Here are all the design-related links in one place:
Here are some BOM changes:
The July meeting will be an update about the AllPixel project, a USB-based smart LED controller launched via KickStarter last October by Adam Haile and Dan Ternes of Maniacal Labs.
In addition Ian Hands will demonstrate his (simulated) garage door + sparkcore + Pebble + Ubidots project and update us about geekSPARK in September.
Short tutorials about basic electronics would be welcome.
In an apparent about face the Cary Crossroads Radioshack is now missing almost all the stuff that had kept it a huge exception to the rule up to this point. The repair shop is gone, the wall of Littlebits is gone, everything to do with soldering except a few temp controlled irons is gone, all the plastic boxes, perf boards, and other stuff to do with building things is gone, and the wad of Arduino-related stuff is gone except for a few lonely Arduino boards and a shield or two on the near end of the back. Much quizzing of the staff suggests their supply chain is now a hypothetical construct. Quoting Porky Pig, “That’s all, folks!”