First pass on a cheep? gaussmeter using the A1302 Hall Effect Sensor,
an Arduino 2009 microcontroller, and an LCD daughterboard or "shield".
That's a 5/8" x 3/16" dia pole magnet held against the sensor.
The assembly was not difficult, consisting of inserting the A1302 into
socketed pigtail leads and inserting the LCD shield.
Before you folks start slinging shit at it (in the finest of Internet traditions),
remember that it is the first pass (actually, there was a zero'th pass a
year ago which had no display but sent data by USB stream).
All hardware was purchased assembled and tested.
All development used Open Source software running on Linux.
There is no power bypass cap across the sensor, nor does it
have a compensation cap on its signal line -- it is noisy!
-drh
an Arduino 2009 microcontroller, and an LCD daughterboard or "shield".
That's a 5/8" x 3/16" dia pole magnet held against the sensor.
The assembly was not difficult, consisting of inserting the A1302 into
socketed pigtail leads and inserting the LCD shield.
Bill of materials:
Arduino - $30,
LCD shield - $20
A1302 - $1.50
misc.: leftover pigtail from CD burner, USB 'B' cable - $0.00
Grand Total is $51.50 for all you Van Halen fans.Arduino - $30,
LCD shield - $20
A1302 - $1.50
misc.: leftover pigtail from CD burner, USB 'B' cable - $0.00
Before you folks start slinging shit at it (in the finest of Internet traditions),
remember that it is the first pass (actually, there was a zero'th pass a
year ago which had no display but sent data by USB stream).
All hardware was purchased assembled and tested.
All development used Open Source software running on Linux.
There is no power bypass cap across the sensor, nor does it
have a compensation cap on its signal line -- it is noisy!
-drh
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