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15 dirtypbcs!

A project log for Ignore this ESP8266 board

I stole from every one. The huzza from Adafruit. Matts breakout board. Al1s board from here. NodeMCUs DevKit.

davedarkodavedarko 10/07/2015 at 15:0211 Comments

time for projects... need ideas :D

Discussions

Stefan Lochbrunner wrote 10/31/2015 at 15:32 point

Thanks Dave!

I'm still waiting for my 12E to arrive but in the meantime I'm using the 01 and from playing around with it I have a few suggestions:

- I think you mentioned this already but another pin for 3.3V input as part of JP2 would be great. Using the Vcc pin of the FTDI header might not always be convenient and using the rails seems a bit strange ;)

- I use CP2102 USB/serial converters whose signal level is 3.3V but their onboard 3.3V regulator can't handle the required current. Therefore, a solder jumper to to run the input voltage from the FTDI header either directly to Vcc or to the regulator on this PCB would allow for 5V input through that header.

- The pull-up and LED+resistor on GPIO0 always connect Vcc and ground. The leakage in my case wasn't really a problem but due to the LED I used I had to chose a lower value for the resistor (otherwise it was barely visible) which lead to GPIO0 only being biased to 1.7V. I'm curious, what's the bias voltage on your boards? Everything seemed to work but I think it'd be better to tie the LED to Vcc just to make sure the bias doesn't depend on the choice of LED.

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davedarko wrote 10/31/2015 at 20:08 point

Uhh nice!

I got away with my FTDI programmer that has a jumper to switch the VCC between 3.3V and 5V, that I simply took of and powered the board with USB instead. But yes, I have to add those jumpers :) 

Whenever the ESP board resets, I've noticed that the LED is shining dim. That makes a lot of sense, I didn't see that before because of my "exploded" design in EAGLE. So when GPIO0 is HIGH or LOW my blue LED works fine, but when it is an input, it gets weird. I have no idea about the bias voltage.

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Stefan Lochbrunner wrote 11/01/2015 at 19:38 point

I feel kind of silly that I only thought of doing this after I read your comment

... seems like the simplest thing now ;)

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deʃhipu wrote 10/08/2015 at 07:58 point

How about... a quadruped robot? :P I think you can control 8 servos with the esp8266 directly, so you could make something like #Katka, a mammalian robot easily.

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davedarko wrote 10/08/2015 at 09:29 point

too bad the rails are 3.3V :( I should add ground and another voltage rail on the other side. But yes, your robots are on my todo list :)

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deʃhipu wrote 10/08/2015 at 09:40 point

Katka runs on 3.7V just fine...

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davedarko wrote 10/08/2015 at 11:50 point

I should have left the 3rd pin on the voltage regulator IOs, would have been easier to attach a lipo this way.

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Stefan Lochbrunner wrote 10/07/2015 at 17:17 point

I've been meaning to ask if you'd like to trade one of your boards for a panel of #Breadboard Widgets but obviously I had to wait for the micro USB version ;)

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davedarko wrote 10/07/2015 at 19:23 point

that is the micro version ;)

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Stefan Lochbrunner wrote 10/07/2015 at 19:31 point

I meant I've been waiting until now. So are you interested in trading?

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davedarko wrote 10/07/2015 at 20:10 point

sure :)

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