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  3. πŸ’¬ MySensors Low-power Multi-function node on CR2032

πŸ’¬ MySensors Low-power Multi-function node on CR2032

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nodenrf24l01+si7021atsha204amysensorsat25df512c
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  • FanfanF Offline
    FanfanF Offline
    Fanfan
    wrote on last edited by
    #3

    Hi,
    Thanks a lot for your feedback. My plan is to avoid any soldered header pin, to keep the design small and I use pogo pins for FTDI and ICSP. . This is my very first design. I received the PCB and began to solder. Thus, I found more critical issues :

    • ATmega328pb is not fully pin compatible with atmega328p !! but it does not seem to hurt here
    • the battery holder foot print is wrong : GND is not in the center but one of the side pads
    • the AT25DF pads 5-8 are reversed
    • the antenna schematic and routing is completely false
    • I met issues with the node sketch running at 1Mhz
    • My FTDI and my ICSP send 5V on the power rails, too much for NRF and AT25DF, I should take care of that
      Next iteration should have a better design and be able to work, but this one is clearly not functional. ;)
    1 Reply Last reply
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    • sundberg84S sundberg84

      Looks great! I notised one small thing you might want to check. It looks like you are going to use a low profile battery holder and the battery directly on the board? The ISCP header might short the battery since the battery is all metal. I would not solder pinheaders to this as your 3d view shows, because that will short the battery. You can use pogo-pins and electrical tape for isolation.

      0_1553588101475_4f32944e-3e78-4158-a257-feb2c8671434-image.png

      FanfanF Offline
      FanfanF Offline
      Fanfan
      wrote on last edited by
      #4

      Hi @sundberg84 , Just in case, I redesigned the whole thing to fix some issues. This is still a work in progress, but it is very close to the final design.

      1 Reply Last reply
      1
      • pihomeP Offline
        pihomeP Offline
        pihome
        wrote on last edited by
        #5

        @Fanfan
        what is battery life like running uC at 1Mhz?

        PiHome - Smart Heating Control

        FanfanF 1 Reply Last reply
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        • pihomeP pihome

          @Fanfan
          what is battery life like running uC at 1Mhz?

          FanfanF Offline
          FanfanF Offline
          Fanfan
          wrote on last edited by
          #6

          @pihome I don't know yet, I'm still waiting for the PCB. I should receive them this week. From the mysensors site, 1Mhz vs 8Mhz does not make a huge difference. I'll try them both. What I can say is that 1Mhz as other constraints (I had to compile my own bootloader, then it is difficult to have reliable serial communication faster than 9600bauds, including for uploading sketches, meaning an update in the boards.txt file). Anyway, for sure, I'll build the board and make tests very soon. In the worst scenario, I may switch to CR123 batteries or LS14250.

          pihomeP 1 Reply Last reply
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          • FanfanF Fanfan

            @pihome I don't know yet, I'm still waiting for the PCB. I should receive them this week. From the mysensors site, 1Mhz vs 8Mhz does not make a huge difference. I'll try them both. What I can say is that 1Mhz as other constraints (I had to compile my own bootloader, then it is difficult to have reliable serial communication faster than 9600bauds, including for uploading sketches, meaning an update in the boards.txt file). Anyway, for sure, I'll build the board and make tests very soon. In the worst scenario, I may switch to CR123 batteries or LS14250.

            pihomeP Offline
            pihomeP Offline
            pihome
            wrote on last edited by
            #7

            @fanfan
            I been using temperature sensors with 8Mhz without any custom bootloader or any other modifications on 18650 battery for over 2 years, sensor read temperature once every minute and go to sleep, haven’t done any battery consumption calculations, i m switching from 18650 battery to AAA or AA batteries hence need for power saving

            PiHome - Smart Heating Control

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            • FanfanF Offline
              FanfanF Offline
              Fanfan
              wrote on last edited by
              #8

              @pihome I finally built it. There will still be some adjustments (routing for cutting castelized holes, diode protections removal, ...), but it works. Be careful, it is designed to have 2V-3.6V for power AND signals (double check your ICSP and FTDI programmers). The battery duration depends on your sketch (sleep time, transmission power, encryption ...), your battery (mAh), your sensors (I only have BME280 connected) and your gateway distance. I can tell you that it uses 13mA during transmissions at PA_MAX.

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              • FanfanF Offline
                FanfanF Offline
                Fanfan
                wrote on last edited by
                #9

                @pihome A simple wakeup cycle lasts 1.2s at 20mA. In theory, I should have 10 hours of wakeup time.0_1560173350621_SDS00014.png

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                • pihomeP Offline
                  pihomeP Offline
                  pihome
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #10

                  @Fanfan 20mA during transmission is higher then mine but then i have cheap chines version of multimeter may be its not very accurate as yours. are you using any low clock bootloader?

                  Power consumption with onboard regulator and onboard LEDs removed without any further modification:
                  18.11 mA startup
                  66.9 uA during sleeping
                  3.01 mA during Transmission

                  Pro mini with 1mhz bootloader and on board regulator/LEDs removed:
                  14.42 mA startup
                  7.50 uA during sleeping
                  1.40 mA during Transmission

                  PiHome - Smart Heating Control

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                  • FanfanF Offline
                    FanfanF Offline
                    Fanfan
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #11

                    @pihome I did compile my own dualoptiboot for 1Mhz support. My board does not use any LDO (I am supposed to only plug 3V power supply, not more). The LED is not a "power LED" but a LED connected to A2 to be used (or not) by the sketch. I might have more current consumption because I use PA_MAX as transmission power. or because my sketch does not put BME280 in sleep mode (yet). I still need to rework on the schema and PCB to tune/optimize it (no need for the zener, the schottky and the FTDI connector), but the proof of concept for my very first real design works.

                    rvendrameR 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • FanfanF Fanfan

                      @pihome I did compile my own dualoptiboot for 1Mhz support. My board does not use any LDO (I am supposed to only plug 3V power supply, not more). The LED is not a "power LED" but a LED connected to A2 to be used (or not) by the sketch. I might have more current consumption because I use PA_MAX as transmission power. or because my sketch does not put BME280 in sleep mode (yet). I still need to rework on the schema and PCB to tune/optimize it (no need for the zener, the schottky and the FTDI connector), but the proof of concept for my very first real design works.

                      rvendrameR Offline
                      rvendrameR Offline
                      rvendrame
                      Hero Member
                      wrote on last edited by rvendrame
                      #12

                      @fanfan , not sure if that may help you, but in my case I discovered that even in sleep mode the BME280 still drawing current (up to 1mA). The only solution I found was to bring down the SCL and SDA pins before entering in the sleep mode.

                      Something like this:

                      digitalWrite( A4 , LOW ); 
                      digitalWrite( A5 , LOW ); 
                      sleep( 60000 );
                      
                      wait(200); 
                      weather_sensor.begin();
                      wait(200); 
                      
                      

                      Not sure if this is best way but it worked for me...

                      Home Assistant / Vera Plus UI7
                      ESP8266 GW + mySensors 2.3.2
                      Alexa / Google Home

                      FanfanF 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • pihomeP Offline
                        pihomeP Offline
                        pihome
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #13

                        it would be interesting to see what sleep function does, may be need to read library code to understand this in more detailed.

                        PiHome - Smart Heating Control

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                        • rvendrameR rvendrame

                          @fanfan , not sure if that may help you, but in my case I discovered that even in sleep mode the BME280 still drawing current (up to 1mA). The only solution I found was to bring down the SCL and SDA pins before entering in the sleep mode.

                          Something like this:

                          digitalWrite( A4 , LOW ); 
                          digitalWrite( A5 , LOW ); 
                          sleep( 60000 );
                          
                          wait(200); 
                          weather_sensor.begin();
                          wait(200); 
                          
                          

                          Not sure if this is best way but it worked for me...

                          FanfanF Offline
                          FanfanF Offline
                          Fanfan
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #14

                          @rvendrame Thanks a lot, I'm currently working on another project (electronic load). But I keep your idea in mind and will investigate when I'll continue this sensors project.

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                          • FanfanF Offline
                            FanfanF Offline
                            Fanfan
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #15

                            @rvendrame sorry, I did not see your comment. Yes, it is VERY valuable. Thanks a lot

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