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My own board (50mm x 30mm)

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  • GertSandersG GertSanders

    Battery-monitoring
    The capacitor between AREF and ground (C3 in my schematic) is not to pull that pin to ground, but to stabilise this reference. Not strickly needed I think, but I prefer it since my sensors will live in a "noisy" environment.

    The code to check the level of VCC using the internal 1.1V reference is found here:
    http://provideyourown.com/2012/secret-arduino-voltmeter-measure-battery-voltage/

    The error of 10% is something I can live with, since I need to be able to measure the supply-voltage and monitor it. It does not need to be super exact, since I plan to replace the batteries when I see levels around 2.2V. I'm mostly interested in the trend graph.

    When using a DC stepup converter, you will of course need to use a pin to measure the original battery level, because the step up will make VCC always 3V3. I like your idea of dual use, so I will implement the pins to hold a voltage divider anyway. It is indeed a good use of PCB space.

    I also ordered some step up converters (from Aliexpress) and I will measure them once I get them. Not all China stepups are crap it seems (as far as I read on various websites).

    LED
    As for the LEDs, I have only 1 LED on my boards. The LED blinks very shortly (5ms) every minute to show that a message is sent. It flashes three times if there is an error. So no need to have two leds. It is also the same LED that is flashed by the bootrom (I'm compiled nmy own version of Optiboot to used pin 14 of the atmega328. On a atmega1284p I use pin 1. This is personal preference.

    I checked your schematic. You will need to change the value of C1 (it is now 22pF, will need to be 100nF).

    I will need to read the datasheet of the atmega328 again to understand the exact use of AREF. I'm not sure that pulling this to VCC is a good idea.

    It seems you have removed the crystal and capacitors and plan to use the internal oscillator, I did this as well. Works most of the time, but uploading of sketches can give transmission errors of you go above 57K6 baud. Better to transmit at 36Kbit then (needs a change in the BOARDS.TXT file of Arduino IDE). Slower, but not a problem if you do not plan to change the sketch every 5 minutes.

    Here is a preview of my new board:
    upload-ef70e5f9-9073-4b47-a074-4a48779f1004

    It will be able to work both as a repeater (NRF24 with antenna) as well as a normal sensor board (small NRF24). The voltage divider on A0 is not yet implemented here. Still some empty spaces :-)

    Z Offline
    Z Offline
    Zeph
    Hero Member
    wrote on last edited by
    #109

    @GertSanders said:

    It seems you have removed the crystal and capacitors and plan to use the internal oscillator, I did this as well. Works most of the time, but uploading of sketches can give transmission errors of you go above 57K6 baud. Better to transmit at 36Kbit then (needs a change in the BOARDS.TXT file of Arduino IDE)

    76K8 baud works better than 57K6 (division from 8 MHz has less error), and there are Optiboot variants which support it (with theBOARDS.TXT change you mention). Or 38K4 baud (half that) as you suggest, which is no more timing accurate than 76K8 but by being slower still may give more margin for sloppy edges or the like - if needed.

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    • Carl HC Offline
      Carl HC Offline
      Carl H
      wrote on last edited by
      #110

      Hi GertSanders,

      After ordered and make 3 of 50mm x 30mm board with success. Now I ordered the AC Capable 50mm x 50mm board. I try to read the schema and I have some question. If I want to use this board with only 2 AAA battery, Do I need to use AMS1117? and witch jumper do I need to close? It is optional to use AT24C ?

      Thank you for your help

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      • GertSandersG Offline
        GertSandersG Offline
        GertSanders
        Hardware Contributor
        wrote on last edited by GertSanders
        #111

        @Carl-H To use the board with AA batteries you do NOT need to place the AMS1117. But you will need to short the jumper "BAT" which you will find on the same surface as the AMS1117 if you want to feed the NRF24 with the same power.
        The batteries are connected to the Vcc power line. The NRF24 is connected to the 3V3 power line. There is no interconnection, unless you use the AMS1117 or you short the jumper "BAT".

        The AT24C's are optional. If you do plan to use them, you will also need to place the I2C pull resistors and you will need to short the jumpers RSCL and RSDA. These two jumpers connect the pull-up resistors to the SCL and SDA lines.
        If you use a sensor connected to the pins SCL/SDA of the extension connector you sometimes have no need for pull-ups as the sensor itself has them.
        The jumpers SCL-SDA and SDA-SCL are there to allow switching the signals of the SCL/SDA pins on the extension connector. The jumper closest to the board edge is for the pin on the very edge of the connector, the jumper close to the ATSHA is for the second pin. Without shorting these two jumpers, the pins on the extension connector have no function.
        Some sensor-boards have a SDA-SCL-GND-3V3 connector, others have a SCL-SDA-GND-3V3 pattern. The jumpers are there to be able to use both types.

        IMG_7673.jpg

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        • Carl HC Offline
          Carl HC Offline
          Carl H
          wrote on last edited by
          #112

          Thanks for your clear explication! I have another question, where is the FTDI port ?

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          • GertSandersG Offline
            GertSandersG Offline
            GertSanders
            Hardware Contributor
            wrote on last edited by
            #113

            @Carl-H It is part of the expansion connector.

            I added more info on the OpenHardware.io site.

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            • rmtuckerR Offline
              rmtuckerR Offline
              rmtucker
              wrote on last edited by rmtucker
              #114

              Ok my boards arrived from DirtyPCB.
              A couple of questions:-

              1.I am not using NR2 (The radio socket that protrudes),Also i am using the internal osc and not the xtal.

              So can i leave out C9,NR2 Socket,C5,C6,Xtal ?

              2.What are C2,C3 doing.
              The socket for the cpu i have fitted will not let me squeeze them in.

              Should i solder them in underneath or can they be left out?

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              • BartEB Offline
                BartEB Offline
                BartE
                Contest Winner
                wrote on last edited by
                #115

                @mtucker

                1. Yes you are right about leaving out these components, but if you use NR1 i should leave out C8 and keep C9 (mount the decouple C's as close to the decouple component as possible)

                2. these components are for decoupling the uP. You can mount them at the bottom, do not leave the out.
                  I used a tip from earlier in this forum thread for gaining a little bit more space when using these

                Cheerz

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                • GertSandersG Offline
                  GertSandersG Offline
                  GertSanders
                  Hardware Contributor
                  wrote on last edited by GertSanders
                  #116

                  @BartE answered perfectly. You can leave out C5,C6 and XTAL if you use the internal oscillator. C9 is for the NRF24, no matter if you use NR1 or nR2 socket. And yes, you only need 1 socket, so if you use NR1, no need to add NR2 (and vice versa).
                  Socket NR2 is for the longer (and power amplified) radio with external antenna, NR1 was intended for the standard NRF24L01+ with PCB antenna.
                  C2 decouples AVCC (the analog power input), just as C1 decouples the VCC (digital) power input. C3 stabilises the analog reference input. If you do not use the analog->digital conversion, you could skip C3 as well.

                  I also do not use standard 28 pin sockets, but strip sockets just like BartE.
                  In the image here I used a standard socket, but cut away the middle "bridge" to allow mounting the decoupling capacitors.

                  https://www.openhardware.io/uploads/568faa0cbaba42246aa57103/image/IMG_7527.jpg

                  In the image below I use the strips BartE mentioned:

                  https://www.openhardware.io/uploads/568faa0cbaba42246aa57103/image/IMG_7686.jpg

                  More images and details are here:

                  https://www.openhardware.io/view/5/Battery-based-atmega328p-sensor-no-SMD

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                  • rmtuckerR Offline
                    rmtuckerR Offline
                    rmtucker
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #117

                    I am pulling out what hair i have left.
                    All i am getting is this:-
                    find parent
                    send: 253-253-255-255 s=255,c=3,t=7,pt=0,l=0,sg=0,st=bc:
                    find parent
                    send: 253-253-255-255 s=255,c=3,t=7,pt=0,l=0,sg=0,st=bc:
                    find parent
                    send: 253-253-255-255 s=255,c=3,t=7,pt=0,l=0,sg=0,st=bc:
                    find parent
                    send: 253-253-255-255 s=255,c=3,t=7,pt=0,l=0,sg=0,st=bc:
                    find parent
                    send: 253-253-255-255 s=255,c=3,t=7,pt=0,l=0,sg=0,st=bc:
                    find parent
                    send: 253-253-255-255 s=255,c=3,t=7,pt=0,l=0,sg=0,st=bc:
                    Init complete, id=253, parent=255, distance=255
                    Battery:3.161 Batt%:90 Temperature:21.73C Humidity:56%
                    find parent
                    send: 253-253-255-255 s=255,c=3,t=7,pt=0,l=0,sg=0,st=bc:

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                    • sundberg84S Offline
                      sundberg84S Offline
                      sundberg84
                      Hardware Contributor
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #118

                      Node 253 tries to connect and fint its way to the gateway (find parent) but doesnt get any respons.
                      Do you have a working gateway - what does the gateway log looks like?

                      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

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                      • rmtuckerR Offline
                        rmtuckerR Offline
                        rmtucker
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #119

                        Yes the gateway has been working fine.
                        I will connect the gateway back up to the computer and see what it is saying and let you know.

                        1 Reply Last reply
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                        • GertSandersG Offline
                          GertSandersG Offline
                          GertSanders
                          Hardware Contributor
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #120

                          Which controller are you using?

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                          • rmtuckerR Offline
                            rmtuckerR Offline
                            rmtucker
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #121

                            Sorry Guys seems the aerial was not tight enough on the Gateway,All working great now.

                            1 Reply Last reply
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                            • rmtuckerR Offline
                              rmtuckerR Offline
                              rmtucker
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #122

                              Hmm thats a little worrying,Both sensors are not enclosed sitting in fresh air next to each other.
                              10% away from each other seems a lot.
                              I am awaiting a delivery of more SI7021 sensors let's see where that takes us??
                              0_1454372709451_Screenshot from 2016-02-02 00:21:23.jpg

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                              • G Offline
                                G Offline
                                gloob
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #123

                                Are these identical sensors?

                                I have 10 sensebender micros with a SI7021 sensor and they show completely the same values.

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                                • rmtuckerR Offline
                                  rmtuckerR Offline
                                  rmtucker
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #124

                                  No
                                  One is an si7021 running on the board in this thread.
                                  The other is a HTU21D running on a pro micro that i already had set up and running.

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                                  • alexsh1A Offline
                                    alexsh1A Offline
                                    alexsh1
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #125

                                    @GertSanders
                                    I have been struggling to upload photos in the openhardware section of your node and I think it is better if we move our discussion here. Take a look at these:

                                    0_1456851220108_2016-02-29 13.20.24.jpg

                                    0_1456851230641_2016-02-29 13.22.06.jpg

                                    This is my answer to the problem, but I think we can have a neater solution by having jumpers deciding on SDA/SDL pin out ?

                                    GertSandersG 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • alexsh1A alexsh1

                                      @GertSanders
                                      I have been struggling to upload photos in the openhardware section of your node and I think it is better if we move our discussion here. Take a look at these:

                                      0_1456851220108_2016-02-29 13.20.24.jpg

                                      0_1456851230641_2016-02-29 13.22.06.jpg

                                      This is my answer to the problem, but I think we can have a neater solution by having jumpers deciding on SDA/SDL pin out ?

                                      GertSandersG Offline
                                      GertSandersG Offline
                                      GertSanders
                                      Hardware Contributor
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #126

                                      @alexsh1 There is indeed a better solution, the next version of this board will allow swapping the I2C data and clock pins :-)

                                      alexsh1A rmtuckerR 2 Replies Last reply
                                      0
                                      • GertSandersG GertSanders

                                        @alexsh1 There is indeed a better solution, the next version of this board will allow swapping the I2C data and clock pins :-)

                                        alexsh1A Offline
                                        alexsh1A Offline
                                        alexsh1
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #127

                                        @GertSanders
                                        Other than that I have not been using the JST connector - this may save some space unless you want to leave it as a power backup. I never used the second row pins (behind the FTDI connection) and some of them are not accessible if using a sensor connected via I2C.

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                                        • GertSandersG GertSanders

                                          @gloob There are two connections on the board to allow soldering the battery holder. Both the AA and AAA versions I use have the same pin spacing (seems standard), so you can use an AA battery holder as @alexsh1 does, or an AAA as I have.

                                          http://forum.mysensors.org/uploads/files/1446751714416-image.jpeg

                                          The red arrows show where the batteryholder pins should go. If you have individual AAA battery holders, then the pins surrounded by yellow circle are also used to connect the batteries in series. If the battery holder holds 2 batteries, then only the pins pointed to by red arrows are used.

                                          batteryholderconnections.jpg

                                          The PLUS sign next the the pin on the lower right of the above image is for the LED, the polarity of the pins from the battery is marked on the silkscreen of the bottom side. Looking at it from the top side, the pin above right is for Positive, the pin on below right is for Negative (or GND).

                                          Jumper J2 is to connect the IRQ pin from the NRF24 to pin 2 (INT0) of the atmega328. You could also use that to connect a switch between the top jumper pad (connected to pin 2) and the extra ground pin of C5, to use with a doorswitch. I have used this with the internal pull up, but that would not be very good for the battery-use. It is better to use a 1MOhm pull up resistor wich can also be connected using the extra hole connected to pin 2 and Vcc

                                          rmtuckerR Offline
                                          rmtuckerR Offline
                                          rmtucker
                                          wrote on last edited by rmtucker
                                          #128
                                          This post is deleted!
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