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£5.99
• The rings are 'chainable'
- connect the output pin of one to the input pin of another• Use only one microcontroller pin to control
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£7.99
• The rings are 'chainable'
- connect the output pin of one to the input pin of another• Use only one microcontroller pin to control
...
Archived Product
£16.99
• The rings are 'chainable'
- connect the output pin of one to the input pin of another• Use only one microcontroller pin to control
...
Archived Product
£22.99
• Arranged in a 5x 8 matrix, each pixel is individually addressable• Only one pin (Digital 6) is required to control all the LEDs• You can cut a trace & use nearly any other pin if you need some customization• Shields can be chained together for extra light blinking joy! • Please click here to see the Neo Pixel detailed guide Put on your sunglasses before putting this shield onto your 'duino
- 40 eye-blistering RGB LEDs adorn the Neo Pixel shield for a blast of configurable color. Arranged in a 5x 8 matrix, each pixel is individually addressable. Only one pin (Digital 6) is required to control all the LEDs. You can cut a trace & use nearly any other pin if you need some customization. To make it easy to start, the LEDs are powered from the 5v onboard Arduino supply. As long as you aren't lighting up all the pixels full power white that should be fine. You can also solder in the included terminal block (pro-tip: put it on the bottom of the board so it doesn't stick up) to attach an external 4-6VDC power supply. There's a polarity protection FET on there in case you wire the power backwards (we would never do that, it was, umm, a friend of ours, yeah that's it!) If, say, you need MORE blinky, you can chain these together. For the second shield, connect the DIN connection to the first shield's DOUT. Also connect a ground pin together & power with 5V. There you go! You can chain as many as you'd like although after 5 or more shields you may run low on RAM if you're using an UNO. We include both stacking headers & plain headers. Use whichever you prefer
- there isn't a lot of space left over for the 'duino pin breakouts so if you want to wire up some other outputs or sensors the stacking headers are good. For a slim sturdy look, solder on the plain headers.

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Archived Product
£5.5
• Each LED is addressable as the driver chip is inside the LED• Each one has ~18m A constant current drive so the colour will be very consistent even if the voltage varies• No external choke resistors are required making the design slim• The LEDs are 'chainable' by connecting the output of one stick into the input of another• Power the whole thing with 5VDC (4-7V works) & you're ready to rock• Please click here to see the Neo Pixel detailed guide Make your own little LED strip arrangement with this stick of Neo Pixel LEDs. We crammed 8 of the tiny 5050 (5mm x 5mm) smart RGB LEDs onto a PCB with mounting holes & a chainable design. Use only one microcontroller pin to control as many as you can chain together! Each LED is addressable as the driver chip is inside the LED. Each one has ~18m A constant current drive so the colour will be very consistent even if the voltage varies, & no external choke resistors are required making the design slim. Power the whole thing with 5VDC (4-7V works) & you're ready to rock. The LEDs are 'chainable' by connecting the output of one stick into the input of another
- see the photo above. There is a single data line with a very timing-specific protocol. Since the protocol is very sensitive to timing, it requires a real-time microcontroller such as an AVR, Arduino, PIC, mbed, etc. It cannot be used with a Linux-based microcomputer or interpreted microcontroller such as the netduino or Basic Stamp.
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£4.99
• The perfect reference ruler for all your PCB needs!• Handy AWG wire gauge• Measures approx 1" x 6" The first time you soldered up a surface mount component you may have been surprised "these are really small parts!" & there's dozens of different names too! QFN, TDFN, SOIC, SOP, J-Lead, what do they mean & how can you tell how big they are? Now you can have a reference board at your fingertips, with this snazzy PCB reference ruler. Measuring approx 1" x 6", this standard-thickness FR4, gold plate ruler has the most common component packages you'll encounter. It also has font size guide, trace-width diagram, & a set of AWG-sized drills so you can gauge your wire thicknesses. Edges are labeled in inches with 1/8th marks & cm with 0.1cm marks. ...
Archived Product
£15.99
•60 rows of double 5-hole rows•4 power rails with positive/negative markings•6.2" x 2.0" (160mm x 55mm), 0.063" thick FR4•1.2mm / 0.047" drill holes•3 x 0.125" or 3.2mm mounting holes 2.95" apart This proto-board is the PCB you always wish you had, but never realized it! Adafruit took the basic layout of a quarter-sized breadboard (basically, a 'tiny' breadboard plus power rails) & turned that into a beautiful PCB. The top side has a white silkscreen, & the same markings you're familiar with, to make transferring components easy. The bottom has the 5-hole pad design that matches a classic breadboard, with 4 power bus lines on the sides, & no mask so you can easily cut traces when necessary. We used 1.2mm diameter drill holes so even parts with big leads will fit. All holes are thru-plated for strength
- these wont peel off with rework. The finish is a gold plate
- you won't get oxidation like with bare copper perf! There are also two mounting holes so you can attach the PCB to your project box.

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Archived Product
£11.99
•30 rows of double 5-hole rows•4 power rails with positive/negative markings•3.2" x 2.0" (82mm x 55mm), 0.063" thick FR4•1.2mm / 0.047" drill holes•2 x 0.125" or 3.2mm mounting holes 1.9" apart This proto-board is the PCB you always wish you had, but never realized it! Adafruit took the basic layout of a quarter-sized breadboard (basically, a 'tiny' breadboard plus power rails) & turned that into a beautiful PCB. The top side has a white silkscreen, & the same markings you're familiar with, to make transferring components easy. The bottom has the 5-hole pad design that matches a classic breadboard, with 4 power bus lines on the sides, & no mask so you can easily cut traces when necessary.1.2mm diameter drill holes so even parts with big leads will fit. All holes are thru-plated for strength
- these wont peel off with rework. The finish is a gold plate
- you won't get oxidation like with bare copper perf! There are also two mounting holes so you can attach the PCB to your project box.

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Archived Product
£7.49
•15 rows of double 5-hole rows•4 power rails with positive/negative markings•1.7" x 2.0" (44mm x 55mm), 0.063" thick FR4•1.2mm / 0.047" drill holes•2 x 0.125" or 3.2mm mounting holes 1.4" apart This proto-board is the PCB you always wish you had, but never realized it! Adafruit took the basic layout of a quarter-sized breadboard (basically, a 'tiny' breadboard plus power rails) & turned that into a beautiful PCB. The top side has a white silkscreen, & the same markings you're familiar with, to make transferring components easy. The bottom has the 5-hole pad design that matches a classic breadboard, with 4 power bus lines on the sides, & no mask so you can easily cut traces when necessary. We used 1.2mm diameter drill holes so even parts with big leads will fit. All holes are thru-plated for strength
- these wont peel off with rework. The finish is a gold plate
- you won't get oxidation like with bare copper perf! There are also two mounting holes so you can attach the PCB to your project box.

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Archived Product
£13.99
•A large prototyping area mixed between breadboard style & perfboard• All GPIO/I2C/SPI & power pins are broken out to labelled 3.5mm screw terminals & 0.1"" header strips for easy prototyping• Suitable for semi-permanently wiring DIP chips, sensors, LEDs, etc• Extra 4-block 3.5mm screw terminal block for non-GPIO wiring•SOIC surface mount chip breakout area• Click here to view the detailed tutorial guide• To view the Pi Plate library please click here Now that you've finally got your hands on a Raspberry Pi®, you're probably itching to make some fun embedded computer projects with it. What you need is an add on prototyping Pi Plate from Adafruit, which can snap onto the Pi PCB (and is removable later if you wish) & gives you all sorts of prototyping goodness to make building on top of the Pi super easy. We added lots of basic but essential goodies. First up, there's a big prototyping area, half of which is 'breadboard' style & half of which is 'perfboard' style so you can wire up DIP chips, sensors, & the like. Along the edges of the proto area, all the GPIO/I2C/SPI & power pins are broken out to 0.1" stips so you can easily connect to them. On the edges of the prototyping area, all of the breakout pins are also connected to labeled 3.5mm screw-terminal blocks. This makes it easy to semi-permanently wire in sensors, LEDs, etc. There's also a 4-block terminal block broken out to 0.1" pads for general non-GPIO wiring. Finally, we had a little space remaining over the metal connectors so we put in an SOIC surface mount chip breakout area, for those chips that dont come in DIP format. Kit
Includes:: Custom PCB with silk screened pin labels 3.5mm screw terminal blocks Push header strips GPIO header socket It's dead simple to put together
- even a beginner can do it in twenty minutes!

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Archived Product

Adafruit OLED Breakout Board - 16-bit Colour 1.27 With MicroSD Holder

•The visible portion of the OLED measures 1.27"" diagonal•Contains 128x96 RGB pixels, each one made of red, green and blue OLEDs•Each pixel can be set with 16-bits of resolution for a large range of colours•Because the display uses OLEDs, there is no backlight, and the contrast is very high (black is really black)•This design includes built-in logic level shifting so you can use it with 3-5VDC power and logic levels•The example code shows how to read a bitmap from the uSD card and display it all via SPI•Please click here to view the full LibraryWe love our black and white monochrome displays but we also like to dabble with some colour now and then. Our 1.27" colour OLED displays are perfect when you need a small display with vivid, high-contrast 16-bit colour. The
visible portion of the OLED measures 1.27" diagonal and contains 128x96 RGB pixels, each one made of red, green and blue OLEDs. Each pixel can be set with 16-bits of resolution for a large range of colours. Because the display uses OLEDs, there is no backlight, and the contrast is very high (black is really black). We picked this display for its excellent colour, this is the nicest mini OLED we could find! This OLED uses the SSD1351 driver chip, which manages the display. You can talk to the driver chip using 4-wire write-only SPI (clock, data, chip select, data/command and an optional reset pin). Included on the fully assembled breakout is the OLED display and a small boost converter (required for providing 12V to the OLED) and a microSD card holder. This design includes built-in
logic level shifting so you can use it with 3-5VDC power and logic levels. Our example code shows how to read a bitmap from the uSD card and display it all via SPI.
RIP - This product is no longer available on our network. It was last seen on 22.07.2020

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£27.99

Product Description

• The visible portion of the OLED measures 1.27"" diagonal• Contains 128x 96 RGB pixels, each one made from red, green & blue OLEDs• Each pixel can be set with 16-bits of resolution for a large range of colours• Because the display uses OLEDs, there is no backlight, & the contrast is very high (black is really black)• This design

Includes::
built-in logic level shifting so you can use it with 3-5VDC power & logic levels• The example code shows how to read a bitmap from the u SD card & display it all via SPI• Please click here to view the full Library We love our black & white monochrome displays but we also like to dabble with some colour now & then. Our 1.27" colour OLED displays are perfect when you need a small display with vivid, high-contrast 16-bit colour. The visible portion of the OLED measures 1.27" diagonal & contains 128x 96 RGB pixels, each one made from red, green & blue OLEDs. Each pixel can be set with 16-bits of resolution for a large range of colours. Because the display uses OLEDs, there is no backlight, & the contrast is very high (black is really black). We picked this display for its excellent colour, this is the nicest mini OLED we could find! This OLED uses the SSD1351 driver chip, which manages the display. You can talk to the driver chip using 4-wire write-only SPI (clock, data, chip select, data/command & an optional reset pin). Included on the fully assembled breakout is the OLED display & a small boost converter (required for providing 12V to the OLED) & a micro SD card holder. This design

Includes::
built-in logic level shifting so you can use it with 3-5VDC power & logic levels. Our example code shows how to read a bitmap from the u SD card & display it all via SPI.

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Jargon Buster

Black - A colour which does not emit any colour of the spectrum. Black absorbs all frequencies of the spectrum.
White - A colour combining all colours
Pixels - A single point within an image on a screen
Resolution - The number of pixels a device can display
Clock - A device used for telling the time
Blue - A primary colour
Red - One of the three primary colours
16-bit - 16 integers or data units. A 16-bit processor can acess 16-bits in a single operation.
Colour - The categorised spectrum of light visable to humans
Set - a group of items usually related to one another. Some objects cannot function without the complete set of items.
Love - Someone who shows deep affection for someone else.
Large - something that takes up more space than normal.
Small - something that takes up less space than normal.
Design - A drawing or styles that shows the look and functionality of something before its made.

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Page Updated: 2016-11-13 21:12:27

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