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  3. What did you build today (Pictures) ?

What did you build today (Pictures) ?

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  • FanfanF Offline
    FanfanF Offline
    Fanfan
    wrote on last edited by Fanfan
    #766

    Well,in my case, I mounted and tried to fix bugs in my very first design. This is supposed to be a castelizable Sensebender compatible node, embedding NRF24L01+, LED, Temp/Humi/Press sensor, Memory, crypto, with most of the IO exposed. The updated design is online, but still work in progress. 0_1555517692648_IMG_20190417_180651748.jpg
    project on OpenHardware

    acbA 1 Reply Last reply
    2
    • acbA acb

      Continuing along the theme of one of my last projects, I built a nRF52832 into a 328p Pro Mini footprint. Made two versions: One with some edge SMA or U.Fl pads and another with a PCB trace antenna:

      0_1555494186797_Pro Mini 328p vs. Pro Mini nRF52.jpg

      0_1555494248417_Pro Mini 328p vs Pro Mini nRF52.jpg

      I wanted to start getting into using 32-bit microcontrollers (ARM Cortex varieties like nRF5x, SAMDs, STMs, etc.) for some more complex HA and other electronics projects and am trying to ease the learning curve from all my 8-bit ATMEGA experience.

      Keeping the 328p pin-compatible footprint and PCB size means I can still reuse most of my other Pro Mini project boards to get going. An added bonus is the nRF52's ability to remap (almost) any pins, which will no doubt come in handy.

      They’re both two layer boards and I get pretty decent range out of the PCB trace antenna - ever so slightly better RSSI than EByte’s E73-2G4M04S1B, which was surprising since I didn’t really do anything different (that I’m aware of) and their module is shielded too.

      Since there’s no need for a separate nRF24 board and other associated components, like external SRAM or ATSHA, it’ll possibly save me a few $ too! Power pins next to the (remappable) I2C pins make some of the sensor modules (like SI7021) pluggable.

      I also gain 16x the program memory (512K vs. 32K) and 8x the speed (64MHz vs. 8MHz) which is no small increment!

      Some of the project boards I have made use of the Pro Mini 328p’s FTDI pins, so I added a few components to enable the use of an FTDI programmer with custom DFU serial bootloader.

      0_1555494282393_FTDI DFU Serial Bootloader - Pro Mini nRF52.jpg

      Basically, a DTR pin toggle from the FTDI will reset the nRF52 into a state where it’ll briefly listen for a new program - similar to Adafruit’s Feather. You can also force that state for a longer period with a combination button press like Nordic and SparkFun’s development boards.

      I’m unfamiliar with SWD/JTAG programming/debugging and all things GDB/OCD, so I built myself a black magic probe out of a STM32 blue pill and am going to have a play with all of that, along with VS Code and PlatformIO and probably one or two others.

      MySensors nRF52 support worked out of the box (!) - so a huge thanks to all the hard work of the folks round here for getting that up and running. If there’s anything I can help with there, please let me know and if I’m able, I’ll try to take a stab at it (OTA maybe?). Like I said, I’ve got quite a steep learning curve here though.

      On the low power end, I added the DCDC components Nordic recommend too and managed to get the MySensors smartSleep() current down to around 0.7uA - as per the datasheet, I think. However, I found that with a couple more code tweaks and grounding the SWDCLK, I would get into the nA region. This seems a bit out of spec to me and perhaps it’s just a measuring error, but it was repeatable and the board still happily sending data/heartbeat again each time it woke up. (It’s fluctuating around 1.6nA below - no sensors connected though, but it’s a start…)

      0_1555494689754_1.6nA Fluctuating Sleep Current - SWDCLK to GND - Pro Mini nRF52.JPG

      One other project in the back of my mind is using this board as the basis for a quadcopter, but that’ll probably have to wait until the summer holidays…!

      berkseoB Offline
      berkseoB Offline
      berkseo
      wrote on last edited by
      #767

      @acb Wow. Awesome

      acbA 1 Reply Last reply
      1
      • berkseoB Offline
        berkseoB Offline
        berkseo
        wrote on last edited by berkseo
        #768

        My light sensor on the window. Will work as a slave device for the curtain controller.
        0_1555632724931_WhatsApp Image 2019-04-19 at 02.39.39.jpg

        https://youtu.be/DQcyOksFXE8

        1 Reply Last reply
        3
        • sundberg84S Offline
          sundberg84S Offline
          sundberg84
          Hardware Contributor
          wrote on last edited by
          #769

          New gateway going live and migrating slowly from Domoticz to Homeassistant. At least to try it.

          0_1555657543370_IMG_20190419_090304.jpg

          Controller: Proxmox VM - Home Assistant
          MySensors GW: Arduino Uno - W5100 Ethernet, Gw Shield Nrf24l01+ 2,4Ghz
          MySensors GW: Arduino Uno - Gw Shield RFM69, 433mhz
          RFLink GW - Arduino Mega + RFLink Shield, 433mhz

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • acbA Offline
            acbA Offline
            acb
            wrote on last edited by
            #770

            @nagelc Thanks! The clip on programmer is one-part Adafruit’s FTDI “Fiddy” from here, and one-part SparkFun’s old (retired?) 3.3 or 5v selectable FTDI programmer with a custom 3D printed enclosure.

            I plan to modify the “Fiddy” design a bit as there were some elements of it that I’ve found a bit frustrating. However, YMMV. Gotta love pogo pins for programming though…

            Re: Board envy. Really? Well, if you like, I could do what I did on my last project - which was selling the leftovers. At the moment, I always make more than I need, for testing and some much needed practice with the smaller 0402s. Just send me a chat message if you (or anyone else?) are interested.

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • monteM monte

              @acb have you written a bootloader yourself, or found already available? Can you tell more about it and a board you using to connect nrf52 to FTDI?
              Nice work!

              acbA Offline
              acbA Offline
              acb
              wrote on last edited by
              #771

              @monte Re: FTDI Boards & Bootloaders.

              I didn’t write the bootloader myself from scratch, but modified and combined various elements from Nordic’s SDK v11 example, SparkFun’s development version and Adafruit’s Feather version.

              It was quite a nice learning experience of hacking in bootloader land and dealing with event-driven architectures without any low level debugging skills (yet!) - that’s why I’m now trying to get into SWD/JTAG debugging to make things like this easier.

              I certainly don’t understand everything that’s going on, but “loosely” from what I can figure out, it uses Nordic’s proprietary SoftDevice (S132) combined with some custom bootloader code to boot into a predefined state, where it’ll wait for new “image” either over a serial or bluetooth connection.

              The new “image” can be either your regular sketch-type code (referred to as the “application”), a new SoftDevice (S212, S332, etc.) and/or even a new bootloader.

              Once the new “image” is received and validated by the (existing) bootloader, it is copied to replace the existing “image” parts where necessary and the chip is reset.

              Nordic’s pc-nrfutil command line utility handles interfacing with any standard FTDI board over a COM port (mine is an old SparkFun, but any should work) to perform the upload.

              In SDK11, there isn’t much in the way of safeguards, but in SDK15 there are things like cryptographic signing, custom initialization packets and protocol buffers, etc.

              I did have to make one tweak to the nrfutil Python code, to make it wait a little longer after opening the COM port before sending the DFU initialization packet. This might be unnecessary with optimized bootloader code, I don’t know, since the nRF52832 boots pretty quickly.

              I could go on, but I’m still learning myself, and so if you or anyone else has any other questions, comments, suggestions, etc., perhaps we better move them to a new discussion thread? (Just tag me in so I see it…)

              Thanks for your interest though!

              monteM 1 Reply Last reply
              1
              • FanfanF Fanfan

                Well,in my case, I mounted and tried to fix bugs in my very first design. This is supposed to be a castelizable Sensebender compatible node, embedding NRF24L01+, LED, Temp/Humi/Press sensor, Memory, crypto, with most of the IO exposed. The updated design is online, but still work in progress. 0_1555517692648_IMG_20190417_180651748.jpg
                project on OpenHardware

                acbA Offline
                acbA Offline
                acb
                wrote on last edited by
                #772

                Very nice @Fanfan!

                Love the power protections - those would have saved me a few nRF24s in the past!

                How have you found the ceramic antennas?

                I’ve been wondering whether to add pads to mine for experimenting...

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • berkseoB berkseo

                  @acb Wow. Awesome

                  acbA Offline
                  acbA Offline
                  acb
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #773

                  Thanks @berkseo!

                  Have been enjoying your work with nRF52 designs.

                  Also on my list is trying the built-in capacitive touch capabilities of the chip.

                  I can @ you if I get anywhere with it - might come in handy for your capacitive touch glass mini switch to save you a few components?

                  berkseoB 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • acbA acb

                    Thanks @berkseo!

                    Have been enjoying your work with nRF52 designs.

                    Also on my list is trying the built-in capacitive touch capabilities of the chip.

                    I can @ you if I get anywhere with it - might come in handy for your capacitive touch glass mini switch to save you a few components?

                    berkseoB Offline
                    berkseoB Offline
                    berkseo
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #774

                    @acb Of course!!!, ttp 223 gives a reliable result, but if there is an opportunity to make a stable implementation based on the chip itself, then definitely it needs to be done. I would appreciate any help and advice.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • acbA acb

                      @monte Re: FTDI Boards & Bootloaders.

                      I didn’t write the bootloader myself from scratch, but modified and combined various elements from Nordic’s SDK v11 example, SparkFun’s development version and Adafruit’s Feather version.

                      It was quite a nice learning experience of hacking in bootloader land and dealing with event-driven architectures without any low level debugging skills (yet!) - that’s why I’m now trying to get into SWD/JTAG debugging to make things like this easier.

                      I certainly don’t understand everything that’s going on, but “loosely” from what I can figure out, it uses Nordic’s proprietary SoftDevice (S132) combined with some custom bootloader code to boot into a predefined state, where it’ll wait for new “image” either over a serial or bluetooth connection.

                      The new “image” can be either your regular sketch-type code (referred to as the “application”), a new SoftDevice (S212, S332, etc.) and/or even a new bootloader.

                      Once the new “image” is received and validated by the (existing) bootloader, it is copied to replace the existing “image” parts where necessary and the chip is reset.

                      Nordic’s pc-nrfutil command line utility handles interfacing with any standard FTDI board over a COM port (mine is an old SparkFun, but any should work) to perform the upload.

                      In SDK11, there isn’t much in the way of safeguards, but in SDK15 there are things like cryptographic signing, custom initialization packets and protocol buffers, etc.

                      I did have to make one tweak to the nrfutil Python code, to make it wait a little longer after opening the COM port before sending the DFU initialization packet. This might be unnecessary with optimized bootloader code, I don’t know, since the nRF52832 boots pretty quickly.

                      I could go on, but I’m still learning myself, and so if you or anyone else has any other questions, comments, suggestions, etc., perhaps we better move them to a new discussion thread? (Just tag me in so I see it…)

                      Thanks for your interest though!

                      monteM Offline
                      monteM Offline
                      monte
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #775

                      @acb we can continue discussion in this thread, If you want: https://forum.mysensors.org/topic/6961/nrf5-action/

                      So as I understand for now you are using native SDK and not using Arduino and mysensors? As far as I know arduino's core for nrf5 has no support for bootloaders, and mysensors conflicts even with softdevice being present on a chip. And it seems that sandeepmistry (author of the core) isn't going to invest his time into writing bootloader and can't use nordic's one because of license. I would like to have a bootloader solely for bluetooth OTA programming for projects beside mysensors. Maybe you could share your work, and/or write some kind of brief tutorial on where to start working on this subject maybe to avoid problems you have already solved? Anyway, great work from you, hope someday we will have mysensors on nrf52 with working OTA.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • fernando alvarez buyllaF Offline
                        fernando alvarez buyllaF Offline
                        fernando alvarez buylla
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #776

                        well this is my project , right now im using 2 arduino nano with ethernet shield to read 3 lines Voltage on a delta instalation , 3 current sensors of 300amps for a motor , and 1 water pressure ,
                        all conected to a raspberry pi with domoticz
                        0_1555866423061_IMG_20190416_160915041_BURST000_COVER_TOP.jpg

                        but yesterday i decide to change all , instead of 2 uno i will use a pro mini with a nrf24
                        so i desing two pcb
                        0_1555866610375_downImg.png

                        0_1555866627272_downImg2.png

                        some code

                        #define MY_NODE_ID 100
                        #define MY_DEBUG
                        #define MY_RADIO_NRF24
                        
                        #include <SPI.h>
                        #include <MySensors.h>  
                        
                        
                        #define CHILD_ID_VOLT_1 1
                        #define CHILD_ID_VOLT_2 2
                        #define CHILD_ID_VOLT_3 3
                        
                        #define CHILD_ID_CURRENT_1 4
                        #define CHILD_ID_CURRENT_2 5
                        #define CHILD_ID_CURRENT_3 6
                        
                        #define CHILD_ID_PRESION 7
                        
                        #define VOLT_SENSOR_ANALOG_PIN_1 0
                        #define VOLT_SENSOR_ANALOG_PIN_2 1
                        #define VOLT_SENSOR_ANALOG_PIN_3 2
                        
                        #define CURRENT_SENSOR_ANALOG_PIN_1 3
                        #define CURRENT_SENSOR_ANALOG_PIN_2 4
                        #define CURRENT_SENSOR_ANALOG_PIN_3 5
                        
                        
                        #define PressPin      A6 
                        
                        
                        
                        unsigned long SLEEP_TIME = 20000; // Sleep time between reads (in milliseconds)
                        
                        MyMessage msg(CHILD_ID_VOLT_1, V_VOLTAGE);
                        MyMessage msg2(CHILD_ID_VOLT_2, V_VOLTAGE);
                        MyMessage msg3(CHILD_ID_VOLT_3, V_VOLTAGE);
                        
                        MyMessage msg4(CHILD_ID_CURRENT_1, V_CURRENT);
                        MyMessage msg5(CHILD_ID_CURRENT_2, V_CURRENT);
                        MyMessage msg6(CHILD_ID_CURRENT_3, V_CURRENT);
                        
                        MyMessage pressureMsg(CHILD_ID_PRESION, V_PRESSURE);
                        
                        float lastVolt1;
                        float lastVolt2;
                        float lastVolt3;
                        
                        float lastCurrent1;
                        float lastCurrent2;
                        float lastCurrent3;
                        
                        float lastPresion;
                        
                        
                        int pressure = 0;
                        float PSI = 0;
                        float PSI_CAL = 2.0;            // Calibration of sensor
                        int PSImsb = 0;
                        int PSIr = 0;
                        
                        
                        
                        void before() {
                        
                        }
                        
                        
                        void presentation()
                        {
                         sendSketchInfo("Multisensor", "1.7");  // Send the sketch version information to the gateway and Controller
                         present(CHILD_ID_VOLT_1, S_MULTIMETER);   // Register this device as power sensor
                         present(CHILD_ID_VOLT_2, S_MULTIMETER);   // Register this device as power sensor
                         present(CHILD_ID_VOLT_3, S_MULTIMETER);   // Register this device as power sensor
                        
                         present(CHILD_ID_CURRENT_1, S_MULTIMETER);   // Register this device as power sensor
                         present(CHILD_ID_CURRENT_2, S_MULTIMETER);   // Register this device as power sensor
                         present(CHILD_ID_CURRENT_3, S_MULTIMETER);   // Register this device as power sensor
                        
                         present(CHILD_ID_PRESION, S_WATER);   // Register this device as power sensor
                         
                        }
                        
                        
                        void setup()  
                        { 
                        
                        }
                        
                        void loop()      
                        {     
                         int Voltaje1 = analogRead(A0);
                         int Voltaje2 = analogRead(A1);
                         int Voltaje3 = analogRead(A2);
                        
                         int Corriente1 = analogRead(A3);
                         int Corriente2 = analogRead(A4);
                         int Corriente3 = analogRead(A5);
                        
                         
                         
                         float VoltLevel1 = map(Voltaje1,0,1023,0,500);
                         float VoltLevel2 = map(Voltaje2,0,1023,0,500);
                         float VoltLevel3 = map(Voltaje3,0,1023,0,500);
                        
                         float CorrienteLevel1 = map(Corriente1,0,1023,0,200);
                         float CorrienteLevel2 = map(Corriente2,0,1023,0,200);
                         float CorrienteLevel3 = map(Corriente3,0,1023,0,200);
                        
                         
                         Serial.print("Voltaje L1: ");
                         Serial.println(VoltLevel1);
                         Serial.print("Voltaje L2: ");
                         Serial.println(VoltLevel2);
                         Serial.print("Voltaje L3: ");
                         Serial.println(VoltLevel3);
                        
                        
                         Serial.print("Corriente L1: ");
                         Serial.println(CorrienteLevel1);
                         Serial.print("Corriente L2: ");
                         Serial.println(CorrienteLevel2);
                         Serial.print("Corriente L3: ");
                         Serial.println(CorrienteLevel3);
                        
                         //sensor de voltaje
                         if (VoltLevel1 != lastVolt1) {
                             send(msg.set(VoltLevel1, 1));
                             lastVolt1 = VoltLevel1;
                         }
                        
                           if (VoltLevel2 != lastVolt2) {
                             send(msg2.set(VoltLevel2, 1));
                             lastVolt2 = VoltLevel2;
                         }
                           if (VoltLevel3 != lastVolt3) {
                             send(msg3.set(VoltLevel3, 1));
                             lastVolt3 = VoltLevel3;
                         }
                        
                        
                        //sensor de corriente
                           if (CorrienteLevel1 != lastCurrent1) {
                             send(msg4.set(CorrienteLevel1, 1));
                             lastCurrent1 = CorrienteLevel1;
                         }
                             if (CorrienteLevel2 != lastCurrent2) {
                             send(msg5.set(CorrienteLevel2, 1));
                             lastCurrent2 = CorrienteLevel2;
                         }
                             if (CorrienteLevel3 != lastCurrent3) {
                             send(msg6.set(CorrienteLevel3, 1));
                             lastCurrent3 = CorrienteLevel3;
                         }
                        
                        /* ************************************************ */
                           pressure  = analogRead    (PressPin) ;        // junk read
                           wait(25);
                           
                        /* • Output: 0.5V – 4.5V linear voltage output. 0 psi outputs 0.5V, 50 psi outputs 2.5V, 100 psi outputs 4.5V 
                           0   psi = .33v after scalling 5.0v to 3.3v
                           50  psi = 1.65v
                           100 psi = 2.97v
                        
                           3.3v/1024 = .0032266 volt per bit
                        */
                           pressure  = analogRead    (PressPin) ;
                        
                           if (pressure < 106) pressure = 106;         // this is minimum of .5v
                           PSI = (pressure - 106 ) * .1246;            // where did we get this?? was .119904
                           PSI = PSI + PSI_CAL;                        // adjustment
                           
                           PSImsb = PSI * 100;
                           PSIr = PSImsb % 100;
                           
                        
                           send(pressureMsg.set(PSI, 2));            // Send water pressure to gateway
                        
                           Serial.print("Presion: ");
                           Serial.println(PSI);
                           
                           wait(200);
                           
                            // end of if (SLEEP_MODE || (cu
                        
                         
                         sleep(SLEEP_TIME);
                        }
                        

                        havent tested with sensors yet

                        but looks good so far
                        0_1555866800921_Anotación 2019-04-21 121255.jpg

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        3
                        • berkseoB Offline
                          berkseoB Offline
                          berkseo
                          wrote on last edited by berkseo
                          #777

                          Today, the first sensors of the devices were soldered, the prototypes of which passed long-time tests. Eliminated children's sores. In matt black they are good :)
                          1_1556060042292_IMG_20190424_014140.jpg 0_1556060042291_IMG_20190424_014129.jpg
                          0_1556060466225_IMG_20190424_015903.jpg
                          0_1556207020867_photo_2019-04-25_18-02-1111.jpg

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          2
                          • alowhumA Offline
                            alowhumA Offline
                            alowhum
                            Plugin Developer
                            wrote on last edited by alowhum
                            #778

                            @berkseo whoa, time for a Kickstarter! They look great! Where did you have them made, and what do they cost?

                            @fernando-alvarez-buylla Always nice to see the Aurora theme being used :-)

                            berkseoB 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • fernando alvarez buyllaF Offline
                              fernando alvarez buyllaF Offline
                              fernando alvarez buylla
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #779

                              And a few days later my pcb's arrived
                              0_1556345757207_IMG_20190427_011106.jpg

                              Now to test the next version

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              1
                              • berkseoB Offline
                                berkseoB Offline
                                berkseo
                                wrote on last edited by berkseo
                                #780

                                Hacking Redmond smart bulb socket RSP-202S

                                0_1556488999240_WhatsApp Image 2019-04-29 at 00.09.52.jpeg

                                https://youtu.be/ApcpM_Oh7uE

                                on nRF51822...

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                1
                                • alowhumA Offline
                                  alowhumA Offline
                                  alowhum
                                  Plugin Developer
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #781

                                  How did you 'hack' it? All I see in the video is you changing a power wire?

                                  berkseoB 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • alowhumA alowhum

                                    How did you 'hack' it? All I see in the video is you changing a power wire?

                                    berkseoB Offline
                                    berkseoB Offline
                                    berkseo
                                    wrote on last edited by berkseo
                                    #782

                                    @alowhum I replaced the manufacturer's software with my own.
                                    0_1556490111282_WhatsApp Image 2019-04-29 at 01.19.43.jpeg

                                    The device now works on the mysensors network

                                    1_1556490583713_photo_2019-04-27_15-12-06.jpg 0_1556490583712_photo_2019-04-07_15-31-44.jpg

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    1
                                    • alowhumA Offline
                                      alowhumA Offline
                                      alowhum
                                      Plugin Developer
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #783

                                      @berkseo very cool! How did you do that? Did you just have to connect the serial holes to an ST_LINK adapter or something similar? Was is difficult to open the device? And, most importantly: is your code available somewhere?

                                      berkseoB 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • berkseoB Offline
                                        berkseoB Offline
                                        berkseo
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #784

                                        Hacking Redmond SkyPlug RSP-100S

                                        0_1556575487052_WhatsApp Image 2019-04-30 at 00.45.17.jpeg

                                        https://youtu.be/C5W_3nAF-2A

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • alowhumA alowhum

                                          @berkseo whoa, time for a Kickstarter! They look great! Where did you have them made, and what do they cost?

                                          @fernando-alvarez-buylla Always nice to see the Aurora theme being used :-)

                                          berkseoB Offline
                                          berkseoB Offline
                                          berkseo
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #785

                                          @alowhum Kickstarter? I'm not sure it's time :) ..The cost of components is approximately $10. PCB made in China, soldered by myself.

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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