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Posted in Arduino Hacks Tagged emf, led, mega, meter ← Fabricating A Music-controlled Stoplight Shutter Remote For RICOH Cameras → ...
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 ...
I've just come across a no-name non-contact, high-precision 80 GHz mmWave radar sensor for liquid level detection with a 40m ...
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 ...
As you can see in the schematic all three TC74 sensors have their SDA and SCL pins connected in series to pin A4 and A5 on the Arduino board. The two 4.7K pull-up resistors must be used when using I2C ...
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.
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 ...
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’, ...
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