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  3. New nrf24l01+ smd

New nrf24l01+ smd

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  • AWIA AWI

    @alexsh1 this is what I did. Mount it in the same direction as the original

    alexsh1A Offline
    alexsh1A Offline
    alexsh1
    wrote on last edited by
    #24

    @AWI Now I see what you mean! Thanks for heads up - really appreciated it. This is the first time I'm dealing with this transceiver in SMD

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • alexsh1A alexsh1

      @Yveaux are these much better now? ;)))

      0_1455024726133_image.jpeg

      YveauxY Offline
      YveauxY Offline
      Yveaux
      Mod
      wrote on last edited by
      #25

      @alexsh1 much less of a challenge :satisfied:

      http://yveaux.blogspot.nl

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • alexsh1A alexsh1

        @GertSanders said:

        This board one is a one-trick pony. It is based on @m26872's concept of a very narrow board, but in my case I just need it to handle 2 magnetic switches.

        This is what I was looking for as I need a small board for a reed switch. Please keep us posted about your testing

        GertSandersG Offline
        GertSandersG Offline
        GertSanders
        Hardware Contributor
        wrote on last edited by
        #26

        @alexsh1 My very narrow board was built and tested today. It works fine, I posted info on the hardware forum.

        I must say I feel pity for this sliver of plastic and metal ...

        alexsh1A 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • GertSandersG GertSanders

          @alexsh1 My very narrow board was built and tested today. It works fine, I posted info on the hardware forum.

          I must say I feel pity for this sliver of plastic and metal ...

          alexsh1A Offline
          alexsh1A Offline
          alexsh1
          wrote on last edited by
          #27

          @GertSanders said:

          @alexsh1 My very narrow board was built and tested today. It works fine, I posted info on the hardware forum.

          I must say I feel pity for this sliver of plastic and metal ...

          Excellent! I ordered your narrow board a few days ago as I thought it would be very useful.

          One thing I can tell for sure - cutters are really well built. They are made in Japan and electrostatic safe. Most important they are not big as the ones I had before.

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • SweebeeS Offline
            SweebeeS Offline
            Sweebee
            wrote on last edited by
            #28

            ordered the pro mini shields and I'm not disappointed :) As small as you can get:




            YveauxY 1 Reply Last reply
            2
            • SweebeeS Sweebee

              ordered the pro mini shields and I'm not disappointed :) As small as you can get:




              YveauxY Offline
              YveauxY Offline
              Yveaux
              Mod
              wrote on last edited by
              #29

              @Sweebee Very nice indeed!
              I'm very surprised btw that you're using 2xAA to power the PIR. Will it work reliably (no false detections), even when the batteries are running out?
              I use 2xAA to power Pro Mini + nRF and an extra AA to power the PIR. This way the supply to the PIR will stay > 3V over time.

              http://yveaux.blogspot.nl

              SweebeeS 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • YveauxY Yveaux

                @Sweebee Very nice indeed!
                I'm very surprised btw that you're using 2xAA to power the PIR. Will it work reliably (no false detections), even when the batteries are running out?
                I use 2xAA to power Pro Mini + nRF and an extra AA to power the PIR. This way the supply to the PIR will stay > 3V over time.

                SweebeeS Offline
                SweebeeS Offline
                Sweebee
                wrote on last edited by
                #30

                @Yveaux the pirs work fine if you only have interrupts with CHANGE. I don't use a sleep timer. If you wake it up every minute or so its unreliable yes. but only with interrupts from the pir it works fine. I have 10 pirs like this. Oldest one is from march 2015 and still running.

                YveauxY alexsh1A 2 Replies Last reply
                1
                • SweebeeS Sweebee

                  @Yveaux the pirs work fine if you only have interrupts with CHANGE. I don't use a sleep timer. If you wake it up every minute or so its unreliable yes. but only with interrupts from the pir it works fine. I have 10 pirs like this. Oldest one is from march 2015 and still running.

                  YveauxY Offline
                  YveauxY Offline
                  Yveaux
                  Mod
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #31

                  @Sweebee Consider yourself lucky then! I have the same issues decribed here when powering using 2xAA.
                  I ditched the step-up converter as it introduces too much noise and reduces battery life. The 3xAA solution seems to work reliably though.

                  http://yveaux.blogspot.nl

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • SweebeeS Sweebee

                    @Yveaux the pirs work fine if you only have interrupts with CHANGE. I don't use a sleep timer. If you wake it up every minute or so its unreliable yes. but only with interrupts from the pir it works fine. I have 10 pirs like this. Oldest one is from march 2015 and still running.

                    alexsh1A Offline
                    alexsh1A Offline
                    alexsh1
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #32

                    @Sweebee

                    You have an excellent setup - I ordered those adapter as well at oshpark.
                    @Yveaux has got a point - I have been struggle to build a reliable PIR on 2xAA batteries. I have just started building it now. 1 year battery life and counting is impressive.

                    @Sweebee Would you care to share your code? Maybe there is anything there which gives us some clues though I believe this is more a hardware issue.

                    YveauxY 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • alexsh1A alexsh1

                      @Sweebee

                      You have an excellent setup - I ordered those adapter as well at oshpark.
                      @Yveaux has got a point - I have been struggle to build a reliable PIR on 2xAA batteries. I have just started building it now. 1 year battery life and counting is impressive.

                      @Sweebee Would you care to share your code? Maybe there is anything there which gives us some clues though I believe this is more a hardware issue.

                      YveauxY Offline
                      YveauxY Offline
                      Yveaux
                      Mod
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #33

                      @alexsh1 said:

                      Would you care to share your code? Maybe there is anything there which gives us some clues though I believe this is more a hardware issue.

                      Agree. Apparently @Sweebee made modifications to the PIR (mainly to move some capacitors, judging from the photos) but maybe you did some more to improve battery life/stability?

                      http://yveaux.blogspot.nl

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • SweebeeS Offline
                        SweebeeS Offline
                        Sweebee
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #34

                        I removed the left capacitor since it's not needed in 3.3v hack. And I moved the right one because otherwise it didn't fit into the case.

                        My sketch:

                        #include <MySensor.h>
                        #include <SPI.h>
                        #include <readVcc.h>
                        
                        // ********** CONFIG **********************************
                        
                            #define NODE_ID AUTO          // ID of node
                            #define CHILD_ID 1            // ID of sensor
                            #define PIR_PIN 3             // Pin connected to the PIR
                            
                            #define MIN_V 2000            // empty voltage (0%)
                            #define MAX_V 3200            // full voltage (100%)
                        
                        // ****************************************************
                        
                        MyMessage msg(CHILD_ID, V_TRIPPED);
                        MySensor node;
                        
                        int oldBatteryPcnt;
                        int sentValue;
                        int forceSend = 0;
                        
                        void setup()
                        {
                          node.begin(NULL, NODE_ID, false);
                          node.sendSketchInfo("PIR Sensor", "1.2");
                          node.present(CHILD_ID, S_MOTION);
                          pinMode(PIR_PIN, INPUT);
                          digitalWrite(PIR_PIN, HIGH);
                        }
                        
                        void loop()
                        {
                          
                          // Get PIR
                          int value = digitalRead(PIR_PIN); // Get value of PIR
                          if (value != sentValue) { // If status of PIR has changed
                            resend(msg.set(value), 5); // Send PIR status to gateway
                            sentValue = value;
                          }
                        
                          // Send batterylevel
                          sendBattery(); 
                        
                          // Sleep until something happens with the sensor
                          node.sleep(PIR_PIN-2, CHANGE); 
                        }
                        
                        // FUNCTIONS
                        
                        void sendBattery() // Send battery percentage to GW
                        {
                          forceSend++;
                          int batteryPcnt = min(map(readVcc(), MIN_V, MAX_V, 0, 100), 100); // Get VCC and convert to percentage      
                          if (batteryPcnt != oldBatteryPcnt || forceSend >= 20) { // If battery percentage has changed
                            node.sendBatteryLevel(batteryPcnt); // Send battery percentage to gateway
                            oldBatteryPcnt = batteryPcnt; 
                            forceSend = 0;
                          }
                        }
                        
                        void resend(MyMessage &msg, int repeats) // Resend messages if not received by GW
                        {
                          int repeat = 0;
                          int repeatDelay = 0;
                          boolean ack = false;
                        
                          while ((ack == false) and (repeat < repeats)) {
                            if (node.send(msg)) {
                              ack = true;
                            } else {
                              ack = false;
                              repeatDelay += 100;
                            } 
                            repeat++;
                            delay(repeatDelay);
                          }
                        }
                        
                        YveauxY M 2 Replies Last reply
                        0
                        • SweebeeS Sweebee

                          I removed the left capacitor since it's not needed in 3.3v hack. And I moved the right one because otherwise it didn't fit into the case.

                          My sketch:

                          #include <MySensor.h>
                          #include <SPI.h>
                          #include <readVcc.h>
                          
                          // ********** CONFIG **********************************
                          
                              #define NODE_ID AUTO          // ID of node
                              #define CHILD_ID 1            // ID of sensor
                              #define PIR_PIN 3             // Pin connected to the PIR
                              
                              #define MIN_V 2000            // empty voltage (0%)
                              #define MAX_V 3200            // full voltage (100%)
                          
                          // ****************************************************
                          
                          MyMessage msg(CHILD_ID, V_TRIPPED);
                          MySensor node;
                          
                          int oldBatteryPcnt;
                          int sentValue;
                          int forceSend = 0;
                          
                          void setup()
                          {
                            node.begin(NULL, NODE_ID, false);
                            node.sendSketchInfo("PIR Sensor", "1.2");
                            node.present(CHILD_ID, S_MOTION);
                            pinMode(PIR_PIN, INPUT);
                            digitalWrite(PIR_PIN, HIGH);
                          }
                          
                          void loop()
                          {
                            
                            // Get PIR
                            int value = digitalRead(PIR_PIN); // Get value of PIR
                            if (value != sentValue) { // If status of PIR has changed
                              resend(msg.set(value), 5); // Send PIR status to gateway
                              sentValue = value;
                            }
                          
                            // Send batterylevel
                            sendBattery(); 
                          
                            // Sleep until something happens with the sensor
                            node.sleep(PIR_PIN-2, CHANGE); 
                          }
                          
                          // FUNCTIONS
                          
                          void sendBattery() // Send battery percentage to GW
                          {
                            forceSend++;
                            int batteryPcnt = min(map(readVcc(), MIN_V, MAX_V, 0, 100), 100); // Get VCC and convert to percentage      
                            if (batteryPcnt != oldBatteryPcnt || forceSend >= 20) { // If battery percentage has changed
                              node.sendBatteryLevel(batteryPcnt); // Send battery percentage to gateway
                              oldBatteryPcnt = batteryPcnt; 
                              forceSend = 0;
                            }
                          }
                          
                          void resend(MyMessage &msg, int repeats) // Resend messages if not received by GW
                          {
                            int repeat = 0;
                            int repeatDelay = 0;
                            boolean ack = false;
                          
                            while ((ack == false) and (repeat < repeats)) {
                              if (node.send(msg)) {
                                ack = true;
                              } else {
                                ack = false;
                                repeatDelay += 100;
                              } 
                              repeat++;
                              delay(repeatDelay);
                            }
                          }
                          
                          YveauxY Offline
                          YveauxY Offline
                          Yveaux
                          Mod
                          wrote on last edited by Yveaux
                          #35

                          @Sweebee Only real difference I see compared to my sketch is that I'm using a timeout when sleeping, so the watchdog stays enabled while sleeping.
                          According to the datasheet, the AtMega power consumption is roughly 4.7uA vs 0.6uA in powerdown mode with/without watchdog enabled:

                          0_1458297879428_Naamloos.png

                          This is a significant difference, but when including the PIR & nRF in the total power consumption it is only a small part.

                          http://yveaux.blogspot.nl

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • SweebeeS Sweebee

                            I removed the left capacitor since it's not needed in 3.3v hack. And I moved the right one because otherwise it didn't fit into the case.

                            My sketch:

                            #include <MySensor.h>
                            #include <SPI.h>
                            #include <readVcc.h>
                            
                            // ********** CONFIG **********************************
                            
                                #define NODE_ID AUTO          // ID of node
                                #define CHILD_ID 1            // ID of sensor
                                #define PIR_PIN 3             // Pin connected to the PIR
                                
                                #define MIN_V 2000            // empty voltage (0%)
                                #define MAX_V 3200            // full voltage (100%)
                            
                            // ****************************************************
                            
                            MyMessage msg(CHILD_ID, V_TRIPPED);
                            MySensor node;
                            
                            int oldBatteryPcnt;
                            int sentValue;
                            int forceSend = 0;
                            
                            void setup()
                            {
                              node.begin(NULL, NODE_ID, false);
                              node.sendSketchInfo("PIR Sensor", "1.2");
                              node.present(CHILD_ID, S_MOTION);
                              pinMode(PIR_PIN, INPUT);
                              digitalWrite(PIR_PIN, HIGH);
                            }
                            
                            void loop()
                            {
                              
                              // Get PIR
                              int value = digitalRead(PIR_PIN); // Get value of PIR
                              if (value != sentValue) { // If status of PIR has changed
                                resend(msg.set(value), 5); // Send PIR status to gateway
                                sentValue = value;
                              }
                            
                              // Send batterylevel
                              sendBattery(); 
                            
                              // Sleep until something happens with the sensor
                              node.sleep(PIR_PIN-2, CHANGE); 
                            }
                            
                            // FUNCTIONS
                            
                            void sendBattery() // Send battery percentage to GW
                            {
                              forceSend++;
                              int batteryPcnt = min(map(readVcc(), MIN_V, MAX_V, 0, 100), 100); // Get VCC and convert to percentage      
                              if (batteryPcnt != oldBatteryPcnt || forceSend >= 20) { // If battery percentage has changed
                                node.sendBatteryLevel(batteryPcnt); // Send battery percentage to gateway
                                oldBatteryPcnt = batteryPcnt; 
                                forceSend = 0;
                              }
                            }
                            
                            void resend(MyMessage &msg, int repeats) // Resend messages if not received by GW
                            {
                              int repeat = 0;
                              int repeatDelay = 0;
                              boolean ack = false;
                            
                              while ((ack == false) and (repeat < repeats)) {
                                if (node.send(msg)) {
                                  ack = true;
                                } else {
                                  ack = false;
                                  repeatDelay += 100;
                                } 
                                repeat++;
                                delay(repeatDelay);
                              }
                            }
                            
                            M Offline
                            M Offline
                            Maciej Kulawik
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #36

                            @Sweebee I see in the sketch, that you are enabling internal pull-up on PIR input. This means, that if PIR is not detecting movement and its output is set to zero, this pull-up resistor consumes 60uA (in the best case).

                            SweebeeS 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • M Maciej Kulawik

                              @Sweebee I see in the sketch, that you are enabling internal pull-up on PIR input. This means, that if PIR is not detecting movement and its output is set to zero, this pull-up resistor consumes 60uA (in the best case).

                              SweebeeS Offline
                              SweebeeS Offline
                              Sweebee
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #37

                              @Maciej-Kulawik in my calculations it is 6uA. The pirs use around 15-20 uA in sleep.

                              M 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • SweebeeS Sweebee

                                @Maciej-Kulawik in my calculations it is 6uA. The pirs use around 15-20 uA in sleep.

                                M Offline
                                M Offline
                                Maciej Kulawik
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #38

                                @Sweebee Depending on value of these pull-up resistors. I have read that they have about 50k, so with vcc=3v you will get 60u.

                                SweebeeS 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • M Maciej Kulawik

                                  @Sweebee Depending on value of these pull-up resistors. I have read that they have about 50k, so with vcc=3v you will get 60u.

                                  SweebeeS Offline
                                  SweebeeS Offline
                                  Sweebee
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #39

                                  @Maciej-Kulawik removed the pull-up and they are all working fine :) Don't know why i have added it, in one of my oldest sketches i havent enabled it.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
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