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Besides the Arduino’s serial monitor, we also used our DSO to measure pulse output from the water flow sensor. In that crude experiement, serial monitor displayed a rate of 56 Litre/hour (in lieu of ...
Posted in Arduino Hacks, car hacks Tagged arduino, automotive, ecu, megasquirt, o2 sensor, speeduino ← Maximum Power Point Tracking: Optimizing Solar Panels The Hackaday Summer Camp Survival ...
How fast does your heart beat? It’s a tough question to answer, because our heart rate changes all the time depending on what we’re doing and how our body is behaving. However, ...
After some searching, I ended up using a microcontroller and a piece of code borrowed from the web that I tweaked and adapted. The microcontroller-based concept was chosen because I wanted to scale ...
Aiming at sensor fusion application development, Rutronik has created a single Arduino-compatible board with a plethora of sensors from Infineon, Bosch SE and Sensirion. Called ‘RAB1 – Sensorfusion’, ...
One of Arduino's biggest strengths is the ability to attach sensor shields to a board. Most shields fit the UNO, but some enterprising companies such as Keystudio make shields for larger boards ...
Arduino Sensors Playground Thursday November 12, 7-10pm In this second workshop you will build on your skills by playing with a variety of interesting and increasingly complex sensors.
Arduino created a Renesas RA4M1 microcontroller board in its Nano form-factor. Called Nano R4, it follows the Uno R4, the first Arduino to use the RA4M1. Episode 13 of our podcast CHIIPs is out now, ...