Grove: Difference between revisions
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12/22 I got some Grove parts including [[ | 12/22 I got some Grove parts including [[CAN Bus]] adapters from [[Seeed Studio]], some proto boards, and a Pi hat. | ||
I also have a Xiao Grove adapter, and a Pico adapter (10 ports). | |||
== Grove CAN BUS Module == | |||
"based on GD32E103" https://www.seeedstudio.com/Grove-CAN-BUS-Module-based-on-GD32E103-p-5456.html It's made by Longan Laboratories | |||
It has a 120ohm terminating resistor on the board, you have to solder a jumper to enable it. | |||
I think it's got a TTL level UART on it so it would go to the RPISER port on the GrovePi0 Pi Hat. | |||
== Grove GPS/BDS Unit == | |||
These are from M5. I have 3 of them. They have a UART on them, it's set to 9600 BPS but can go up to 256000. https://docs.m5stack.com/en/unit/gps | |||
Looks like it has a button battery in there, something to keep in mind in 10 years. I peeked inside, it's the smallest button cell I've ever seen. I need a microscope. Cold start TTFF is < 32 seconds, so if the battery dies that's how long it will take to lock on. Oh heck in 10 years it will be totally obsolete anyway. According to the datasheet, it could be a rechargeable button cell; the chip supports it. | |||
Data on the GPS chip: https://m5stack.oss-cn-shenzhen.aliyuncs.com/resource/docs/datasheet/unit/AT6558_en.pdf | |||
== Pi Hat == | == Pi Hat == | ||
The one I have is this one: https://www.seeedstudio.com/GrovePi-Zero-GrovePi0.html but I find it unlikely I paid $25, I probably got it on a clearance deal. | |||
Made by Dexter Industries GrovePi0 https://www.dexterindustries.com/GrovePi/engineering/port-description/ It has an Atmel Mega328P on it so it's actually an Arduino in disguise. It has 6 Grove ports. They all pass through the Mega328P and are connected to the Pi I2C. https://www.dexterindustries.com/GrovePi/engineering/software-architecture/ | |||
A0 | |||
A1 | |||
A2 | |||
RPISER | |||
D3 | |||
I2C | |||
A different product entirely: https://wiki.seeedstudio.com/Grove_Base_Hat_for_Raspberry_Pi_Zero/ This $9.80 board has its own ARM Cortex M0 MCU. | |||
Both of these boards seem like they happily work without being attached to a Pi. | |||
There is a port that lets you burn new firmware into the Cortex MCU. | The board includes a 12-bit ADC with 3 analog Grove ports. The UART port passes through to the [[Raspberry Pi GPIO]] on GPIO14 and GPIO15. There is a port that lets you burn new firmware into the Cortex MCU. | ||
[[Category: IoT]] | [[Category: IoT]] | ||
[[Category: Electronics]] | [[Category: Electronics]] |
Latest revision as of 20:51, 25 September 2024
12/22 I got some Grove parts including CAN Bus adapters from Seeed Studio, some proto boards, and a Pi hat.
I also have a Xiao Grove adapter, and a Pico adapter (10 ports).
Grove CAN BUS Module
"based on GD32E103" https://www.seeedstudio.com/Grove-CAN-BUS-Module-based-on-GD32E103-p-5456.html It's made by Longan Laboratories
It has a 120ohm terminating resistor on the board, you have to solder a jumper to enable it.
I think it's got a TTL level UART on it so it would go to the RPISER port on the GrovePi0 Pi Hat.
Grove GPS/BDS Unit
These are from M5. I have 3 of them. They have a UART on them, it's set to 9600 BPS but can go up to 256000. https://docs.m5stack.com/en/unit/gps
Looks like it has a button battery in there, something to keep in mind in 10 years. I peeked inside, it's the smallest button cell I've ever seen. I need a microscope. Cold start TTFF is < 32 seconds, so if the battery dies that's how long it will take to lock on. Oh heck in 10 years it will be totally obsolete anyway. According to the datasheet, it could be a rechargeable button cell; the chip supports it.
Data on the GPS chip: https://m5stack.oss-cn-shenzhen.aliyuncs.com/resource/docs/datasheet/unit/AT6558_en.pdf
Pi Hat
The one I have is this one: https://www.seeedstudio.com/GrovePi-Zero-GrovePi0.html but I find it unlikely I paid $25, I probably got it on a clearance deal.
Made by Dexter Industries GrovePi0 https://www.dexterindustries.com/GrovePi/engineering/port-description/ It has an Atmel Mega328P on it so it's actually an Arduino in disguise. It has 6 Grove ports. They all pass through the Mega328P and are connected to the Pi I2C. https://www.dexterindustries.com/GrovePi/engineering/software-architecture/
A0
A1
A2
RPISER
D3
I2C
A different product entirely: https://wiki.seeedstudio.com/Grove_Base_Hat_for_Raspberry_Pi_Zero/ This $9.80 board has its own ARM Cortex M0 MCU.
Both of these boards seem like they happily work without being attached to a Pi.
The board includes a 12-bit ADC with 3 analog Grove ports. The UART port passes through to the Raspberry Pi GPIO on GPIO14 and GPIO15. There is a port that lets you burn new firmware into the Cortex MCU.