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Medo's Home Page Using a MOSFET as a switch is easy. Select any P-MOSFET, make sure it works at your board's logic level, supports enough sweet amps, and you're golden. I can almost guarantee that any...
Medo64.com news digest
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8 years
After sticking with C# and its ugly step-mother Java for a while, I though it was a time to check out a new language. One that seemed interesting was Google’s Go, a simple garbage-collected, strongly-typed, and C-like language supporting Linux and Windows...
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8 years
Cananka, the Raspberry Pi HAT: Components
[This post is part three in the series.]
Usually behind component selection for any project there is a method in the madness. I will try to go through mine. :)
For the most visible part of board, we are going to need a nice CAN bus connector. I personally prefer Phoenix connectors for this purpose. As we are dealing with low voltages, I feel their MCV series is a great choice. It is a 3.81 mm pitch connector... -
8 years
Cananka, the Raspberry Pi HAT: Requirements
[This post is part two in a series.]
Signalling-wise you can see CAN bus as 5V based but its automobile roots make 12V supply voltage quite common and that is what I am actually using at home. Annoying thing when using 12V is that every CAN board has to drop voltage to 5V needed for logic... -
8 years
As I got myself a Raspberry Pi, I started thinking about connecting some electronics to it. And in Raspberry world you can either just connect some wires to connector or go about making a HAT.
Raspberry Pi HAT specification defines both mechanical properties and a minimum of electronics while still allowing you to do whatever you please with available IO. Pretty much the only strict requirements here are board size (65×56 mm), hole placement...
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