• oscilador 555

    oscilador 555

    copilot Entiendo que deseas diseñar un oscilador utilizando el chip 555. Aquí están algunos pasos que puedes seguir para hacer esto. Conecta el pin 1 (GND) del IC 555 a la terminal negativa de tu fuente de alimentación (0V). Conecta el pin 8 (VCC) del IC 555 a la terminal positiva de tu fuente de alimentación (11V). Conecta la resistencia de 10kΩ (R1) entre el pin 8 (VCC) y el pin 7 (DISCHARGE) del 555. Conecta tu potenciómetro de 100kΩ (R2) entre el pin 7 (DISCHARGE) y el pin 6 (THRESHOLD) del 555. Junta los pines 2 (TRIGGER) y 6 (THRESHOLD) juntos y conecta los pines unidos al lado negativo de tu condensador de 10nF (C). Conecta el lado positivo del condensador de 10nF (C) a VCC (el pin 8). Conecta el pin 4 (RESET) al VCC si no quieres usar la función de reset. De lo contrario, puedes conectar una señal de reset aquí. Conecta el pin 3 (OUTPUT) del 555 al terminal positivo de tu resistencia de 470Ω. Conecta el otro terminal de la resistencia a tierra. El condensador de 10uF debe estar conectado en paralelo a la alimentación (entre VCC y GND) para suavizar cualquier ruido en la fuente de alimentación de 11V. Te sugiero que experimentes con el valor del potenciómetro (R2) hasta que consigas el Duty Cycle deseado. Por lo general, es posible cambiar la frecuencia del pulso y ajustar el Duty Cycle utilizando este control. Si, después de realizar estas conexiones y ajustes, aún no puedes obtener el Duty Cycle deseado, podría ser indicativo de que los valores de resistencia y condensador que tienes no son adecuados para tu rango de frecuencia y Duty Cycle objetivo. Para que obtengamos un Duty Cycle del 75%, necesitamos usar el chip 555 en modo astable y debemos calcular los valores de R1 y R2 (resistencia total de carga y descarga respectivamente) que nos ayude a conseguir esto. El tiempo de alta (T_high) y el tiempo de baja del ciclo (T_low) de la oscilación salen determinados por R1, R2, y C (el condensador). Se pueden usar las siguientes fórmulas para calcularlos: T_high = 0.693 * (R1 + R2) * C T_low = 0.693 * R2 * C Duty cycle = ( T_high ) / ( T_high + T_low ) Para un Duty Cycle de 0.75: Estableceremos R1 como la resistencia de 10 kilohmios que se proporcionó. Con el potenciómetro de 100 kilohmios como R2, podemos variarlo para ajustar el Duty Cycle según necesitemos hasta que se llegue a la relación deseada. Considerando que el condensador C es el condensador de 10 nF que se proporcionó, anteriores declaraciones son bajo supuesto que el tiempo de operación (T = T_high + T_low) caiga en un rango aceptable. Para el esquemático: Conecta VCC de tu 555 al terminal positivo de tu fuente de voltaje de 11V y GND a tierra. Conecta los pines 2 (TRIGGER) y 6 (THRESHOLD) juntos y al lado negativo de tu condensador de 10nF. Conecta el lado positivo del condensador a VCC. Conecta el pin 3 (OUTPUT) al terminal positivo de tu resistencia de 470 ohmios. Conecta el otro terminal de la resistencia a tierra. Conecta tu resistencia de 10 kilohmios entre VCC y los pines 2 y 6 del 555. Finalmente, conecta tu potenciómetro entre los pines 2 y 6 y el pin 7 (DISCHARGE) del 555. El condensador de 10uF debería estar conectado en paralelo a la alimentación para suavizar cualquier ruido en la alimentación de 11V. Estas son mis suposiciones y pasos sugeridos pero recuerda variar el potenciómetro hasta conseguir el Duty Cycle deseado en caso de no conseguirlo de forma inmediata. Si por alguna razón no puedes conseguir el Duty Cycle de 75%, es posible que las resistencias y condensadores proporcionados no sean los adecuados para el rango de frecuencia y Duty Cycle deseados. En tal caso, puede que tengas que utilizar otros valores de componentes.

    ninoh

    19 Comments

    11 Stars


  • Scale Snap 3D

    Scale Snap 3D

    3D Camera Module is a scalable SPI enabled 4 camera array pinout for 3D photogrammetry reconstruction which uses I2C to connect between each module to expand camera capacity while keeping capture sequences in sync. It uses ATMega32U4 with its built in USB 2.0 for data transfer and camera array adjustments and capture as well as a micro SD card slot for local image storage. An interrupt logic pinout should be used on the SPI master module as capture command. Each module is powered via USB-C (5V) or barrel jack (12V regulated to 5V).

    cwong7

    &

    collinsemasi
    ryanf

    96 Comments

    6 Stars


  • HC32L110B6YA-CSP16 breakout board

    HC32L110B6YA-CSP16 breakout board

    Discover the benefits of the HC32L110 microcontroller with our compact and versatile breakout board, designed to streamline development and testing for various applications. This user-friendly solution offers essential components like decoupling capacitors, a 32MHz crystal oscillator, and accessible power supply connections. The breakout board also features 0.1" pitch connectors, allowing for easy integration of I/O pins into any project. Unlock the full potential of the HC32L110B6YA-CSP16 microcontroller for rapid prototyping and smooth deployment with our ingeniously designed breakout board.

    vasy_skral

    &

    jharwinbarrozo

    53 Comments

    6 Stars


  • Lipo Charger Shield for Arduino Uno R3 Clone Rev 2

    Lipo Charger Shield for Arduino Uno R3 Clone Rev 2

    Lipo Charger Shield. Directly plugs into Arduino Uno R3. Charge rate set with solder jumpers. Use with any MCU through tapping the VIN pin for power. VIN pin takes either

    jlamflux

    20 Comments

    5 Stars


  • 83 Keyboard

    83 Keyboard

    A 83 key keyboard, Norwegian QWERTY/DVORAK ISO style. It's of course possible to use other languages, as the MX cherry switches will accept keycaps with whatever language you need. It uses 83 1N4148 diodes and three LED's for caps lock,scroll lock, and QWERTY/DVORAK. It also needs pin headers that accepts the pins from a Teensy++2.0

    adrian95

    5 Comments

    5 Stars


  • Smart system for a greenhouse

    Smart system for a greenhouse

    This project is a 6-output irrigation control board with pump and other device support. It features 8 connectors, 2 GPIO pins each, and a GC9A01A display. The board is powered by an STM32L073V8T6 microcontroller and has 6 LEDs connected to GPIO pins. #irrigationcontrol #STM32 #GPIO #GC9A01A #LEDs.

    vasyl

    4 Comments

    5 Stars


  • Raspberry Pi 5 Hat with PCIe Template

    Raspberry Pi 5 Hat with PCIe Template

    Template for Raspberry Pi 5 Model Shield. Include an official pinout so you will always know Raspberry Pi names, the alternative roles of pins, which one is SDA, or SCL, etc. On PCB you can find the 3D model of the Raspberry Pi itself along with the board outline on the silkscreen. #RaspberryPi #Raspberry #RaspberryPi5 #raspberry #Pi #RPi #Shield #template #project #project-template

    vasy_skral

    54 Comments

    4 Stars


  • 28 PINS PROJECT

    28 PINS PROJECT

    Adaptation of 28-PINS PROJECT by FEDEVEL ACADEMY to Flux (c) 2015 Designed by FEDEVEL Academy http://www.fedevel.com/academy. Based on Arduino: http://www.arduino.cc. Released under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported.

    adrian95

    12 Comments

    3 Stars


  • Raspberry Pi 4 Hat Template

    Raspberry Pi 4 Hat Template

    Template for Raspberry Pi 4 Shield. Include an official pinout so you will always know Raspberry Pi names, the alternative roles of pins, which one is SDA, or SCL, etc. On PCB you can find the 3D model of the Raspberry Pi itself along with the board outline on the silkscreen. #RaspberryPi #Raspberry #Pi #RPi #Shield #template #project #project-template #raspberry

    vasy_skral

    41 Comments

    3 Stars


  • AI Design Reviews

    AI Design Reviews

    Whenever I ask for a design review, I need you to test each of these individual aspects one by one: - All reset/enable have an external pull-up or pull-down resistors - None of the floating pins require pull-up or pull-down resistors - All resistor’s voltage rating is sufficient for the maximum voltage applied. If any resistor doesn't contain voltage rating please flag this clearly as an error.

    nico

    21 Comments

    3 Stars


  • Arduino Nano Shield Template

    Arduino Nano Shield Template

    Template for Arduino Nano Shield. Include an official pinout so you will always know Arduino names, the alternative roles of pins, which one is SDA, or SCL, etc. On PCB you can find the 3D model of the Arduino Nano itself along with the board outline on the silkscreen. #Arduino #Nano #Shield #template #project #project-template

    vasy_skral

    &

    jharwinbarrozo

    2 Comments

    3 Stars


  • Raspberry Pi Model B Hat Template

    Raspberry Pi Model B Hat Template

    Template for Raspberry Pi 2, 3, 4 or 400 Model B+ Shield. Include an official pinout so you will always know Raspberry Pi names, the alternative roles of pins, which one is SDA, or SCL, etc. On PCB you can find the 3D model of the Raspberry Pi itself along with the board outline on the silkscreen. #RaspberryPi #Raspberry #Pi #RPi #Shield #template #project #project-template

    vasy_skral

    1 Comment

    3 Stars


  • Triple-Axis Accelerometer

    Triple-Axis Accelerometer

    The LIS3DH is a very popular low power triple-axis accelerometer. It's low-cost, but has just about every 'extra' you'd want in an accelerometer. This sensor communicates over I2C or SPI (our library code supports both) so you can share it with a bunch of other sensors on the same I2C bus. There's an address selection pin so you can have two accelerometers share an I2C bus

    adrian95

    &

    jharwinbarrozo

    1 Comment

    2 Stars


  • EV5920-5048-V-00A Evaluation Board

    EV5920-5048-V-00A Evaluation Board

    This is a recreation of the [EV5920-5048-V-00A](https://www.monolithicpower.com/en/ev5920-5048-v-00a.html) from MPS which demonstrates a MP5920 Hot-Swap controller commanding 5 MP5048 e-fuses in parallel. WIP Items: -Routing In flux, this project demonstrates hierarchal design through the use of modules. Additionally, parametric symbols are used extensively to improve schematic cleanliness. Components in the canvas are locked because their positions correspond to the same positions as the original layout. Changelog from Original MPS Design: - Not including GPIO2 or GPIO3 as included in the original board due to NC pin name on the IC. - PC1 and PC2 footprints are 5mm in pitch and 12.5mm in diameter rather than the 16mm diameter in the original layout. This change corresponds with the selected part more accurately. -Renamed Designators to be More Verbose

    markwuflux

    1 Comment

    2 Stars


  • Custom Programmer for ESP32 Using USB-C USB3.0 Pins

    Custom Programmer for ESP32 Using USB-C USB3.0 Pins

    NOT RECOMMENDED FOR NEW DESIGNS. It did not work during testing. Please refer to [my other project that worked successfully.](https://www.flux.ai/markwuflux/ch340c-esp32-programmer-v2-bottom-layer) Using this programmer to exploit the extra pins given by a USB 3.0 Superspeed cable. By doing so, you can program an ESP32 without adding a programmer port. NOT Compliant with USB-C Standard

    markwuflux

    2 Stars


  • 28 PINS PROJECT

    28 PINS PROJECT

    Adaptation of 28-PINS PROJECT by FEDEVEL ACADEMY to Flux (c) 2015 Designed by FEDEVEL Academy http://www.fedevel.com/academy. Based on Arduino: http://www.arduino.cc. Released under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported.

    brooks

    &

    glorianaamaranthlobot31077
    natassia737234

    6 Comments

    2 Stars


  • Custom Test Platform V1

    Custom Test Platform V1

    I want to create a standard interface from my PCBs to my test equipment. My equipment: PSU: Rigol DP832 Scope: Siglent SDS 1202X-E WaveGen: Siglent SDG810 Logic Analyzer: DSLogic Plus 400MHz VNA: NanoVNA V2 6 scope channels (4 1X, 2 10X) 8 Logic Analyzer channels 1 Wavegen channel 4 Power Nets ( 2 pins each) (tie power nets to oscilloscope inputs) #template #testing

    markwuflux

    20 Comments

    2 Stars


  • Raspberry Pi 3B+ Hat Template

    Raspberry Pi 3B+ Hat Template

    Template for Raspberry Pi 3 Model B+ Shield. Include an official pinout so you will always know Raspberry Pi names, the alternative roles of pins, which one is SDA, or SCL, etc. On PCB you can find the 3D model of the Raspberry Pi itself along with the board outline on the silkscreen. #RaspberryPi #Raspberry #raspberry #raspberrypi #Pi #RPi #Shield #template #project #project-template

    vasy_skral

    10 Comments

    2 Stars


  • FSAE temperature sensor

    FSAE temperature sensor

    PCB that sends ambient temperature and high resolution analog data over a CAN bus for a FSAE electric car. Runs off a Teensy 4.0 and has connection pins for separate external analog sensors.

    michaelkd

    7 Comments

    2 Stars


  • GPS Breakout - ZOE-M8Q (Qwiic)

    GPS Breakout - ZOE-M8Q (Qwiic)

    The SparkFun ZOE-M8Q GPS Breakout is a high accuracy, miniaturized, GPS board that is perfect for applications that don't possess a lot of space. The on-board ZOE-M8Q is a 72-channel GNSS receiver, meaning it can receive signals from the GPS, GLONASS, BeiDou, and Galileo constellations. This increases precision and decreases lock time and thanks to the onboard rechargable battery you'll have backup power enabling the GPS to get a hot lock within seconds! Additionally, this u-blox receiver supports I2C (u-blox calls this Display Data Channel) which made it perfect for the Qwiic compatibility so we don't have to use up our precious UART ports. Utilizing our handy Qwiic system, no soldering is required to connect it to the rest of your system. However, we still have broken out 0.1"-spaced pins in case you prefer to use a breadboard.

    adrian95

    1 Comment

    2 Stars


  • MAX98357 Audio DAC Breakout 077b

    MAX98357 Audio DAC Breakout 077b

    This compact breakout board makes it easy to add high-quality audio output to your microcontroller projects using the MAX98357A/B Class D audio amplifier. Perfect for Arduino, ESP32, Raspberry Pi, or any microcontroller with I2S output capabilities. Features High-Performance Audio: Delivers Class AB audio quality with Class D efficiency (92% efficient at 1W) Powerful Output: 3.2W into 4Ω speakers at 5V supply Clean Sound: Low distortion (0.013% THD+N at 1kHz) Wide Supply Range: Operates from 2.5V to 5.5V Simplified I2S Interface: No MCLK required, just BCLK, LRCLK, and DIN Selectable Gain: Solder jumpers for easy gain selection (3dB, 6dB, 9dB, 12dB, or 15dB) Channel Selection: Configure for left, right, or combined (mono) output Filterless Design: No need for external output filtering components Compact Form Factor: Minimal board space with optimized layout Applications Smart speakers and voice assistants Portable audio devices IoT audio projects Gaming devices and sound effects Educational audio projects Digital instrument amplification The FLUX MAX98357 breakout board requires only three I/O pins plus power, making it the perfect audio solution for projects where simplicity and sound quality matter.

    flux

    &

    ryanf

    2 Stars


  • Arduino-UNO-R3

    Arduino-UNO-R3

    The Arduino Uno R3 is a microcontroller board based on a removable ATmega328P 20 digital input/output pins AVR MCU 8-Bit 5V USB 16MHz #Module #Arduino

    ghhhhfgh

    2 Stars


  • Pin Socket 01x07 2.54mm Vertical hqsC

    Pin Socket 01x07 2.54mm Vertical hqsC

    Through Hole straight socket strip, 01x07, 2.54mm pitch, single row #connector #pinsocket #tht

    w0gen

    1 Star


  • Thermocouple Amplifier AD8495

    Thermocouple Amplifier AD8495

    The AD8495 K-type thermocouple amplifier from Analog Devices is so easy to use, we documented the whole thing on the back of the tiny PCB. Power the board with 3-18VDC and measure the output voltage on the OUT pin. You can easily convert the voltage to temperature with the following equation: Temperature = (Vout - 1.25) / 0.005 V. So for example, if the voltage is 1.5VDC, the temperature is (1.5 - 1.25) / 0.005 = 50°C with terminal block connections

    adrian95

    &

    jharwinbarrozo

    12 Comments

    1 Star


  • Resistive Touch Screen Controller - STMPE610

    Resistive Touch Screen Controller - STMPE610

    This breakout board features the STMPE610, which has both I2C and SPI interfaces available. There is also an interrupt pin that you can use to indicate when a touch has been detected to your microcontroller or microcomputer.

    adrian95

    &

    jharwinbarrozo

    3 Comments

    1 Star


  • oscilador 555 vfiY

    oscilador 555 vfiY

    copilot Entiendo que deseas diseñar un oscilador utilizando el chip 555. Aquí están algunos pasos que puedes seguir para hacer esto. Conecta el pin 1 (GND) del IC 555 a la terminal negativa de tu fuente de alimentación (0V). Conecta el pin 8 (VCC) del IC 555 a la terminal positiva de tu fuente de alimentación (11V). Conecta la resistencia de 10kΩ (R1) entre el pin 8 (VCC) y el pin 7 (DISCHARGE) del 555. Conecta tu potenciómetro de 100kΩ (R2) entre el pin 7 (DISCHARGE) y el pin 6 (THRESHOLD) del 555. Junta los pines 2 (TRIGGER) y 6 (THRESHOLD) juntos y conecta los pines unidos al lado negativo de tu condensador de 10nF (C). Conecta el lado positivo del condensador de 10nF (C) a VCC (el pin 8). Conecta el pin 4 (RESET) al VCC si no quieres usar la función de reset. De lo contrario, puedes conectar una señal de reset aquí. Conecta el pin 3 (OUTPUT) del 555 al terminal positivo de tu resistencia de 470Ω. Conecta el otro terminal de la resistencia a tierra. El condensador de 10uF debe estar conectado en paralelo a la alimentación (entre VCC y GND) para suavizar cualquier ruido en la fuente de alimentación de 11V. Te sugiero que experimentes con el valor del potenciómetro (R2) hasta que consigas el Duty Cycle deseado. Por lo general, es posible cambiar la frecuencia del pulso y ajustar el Duty Cycle utilizando este control. Si, después de realizar estas conexiones y ajustes, aún no puedes obtener el Duty Cycle deseado, podría ser indicativo de que los valores de resistencia y condensador que tienes no son adecuados para tu rango de frecuencia y Duty Cycle objetivo. Para que obtengamos un Duty Cycle del 75%, necesitamos usar el chip 555 en modo astable y debemos calcular los valores de R1 y R2 (resistencia total de carga y descarga respectivamente) que nos ayude a conseguir esto. El tiempo de alta (T_high) y el tiempo de baja del ciclo (T_low) de la oscilación salen determinados por R1, R2, y C (el condensador). Se pueden usar las siguientes fórmulas para calcularlos: T_high = 0.693 * (R1 + R2) * C T_low = 0.693 * R2 * C Duty cycle = ( T_high ) / ( T_high + T_low ) Para un Duty Cycle de 0.75: Estableceremos R1 como la resistencia de 10 kilohmios que se proporcionó. Con el potenciómetro de 100 kilohmios como R2, podemos variarlo para ajustar el Duty Cycle según necesitemos hasta que se llegue a la relación deseada. Considerando que el condensador C es el condensador de 10 nF que se proporcionó, anteriores declaraciones son bajo supuesto que el tiempo de operación (T = T_high + T_low) caiga en un rango aceptable. Para el esquemático: Conecta VCC de tu 555 al terminal positivo de tu fuente de voltaje de 11V y GND a tierra. Conecta los pines 2 (TRIGGER) y 6 (THRESHOLD) juntos y al lado negativo de tu condensador de 10nF. Conecta el lado positivo del condensador a VCC. Conecta el pin 3 (OUTPUT) al terminal positivo de tu resistencia de 470 ohmios. Conecta el otro terminal de la resistencia a tierra. Conecta tu resistencia de 10 kilohmios entre VCC y los pines 2 y 6 del 555. Finalmente, conecta tu potenciómetro entre los pines 2 y 6 y el pin 7 (DISCHARGE) del 555. El condensador de 10uF debería estar conectado en paralelo a la alimentación para suavizar cualquier ruido en la alimentación de 11V. Estas son mis suposiciones y pasos sugeridos pero recuerda variar el potenciómetro hasta conseguir el Duty Cycle deseado en caso de no conseguirlo de forma inmediata. Si por alguna razón no puedes conseguir el Duty Cycle de 75%, es posible que las resistencias y condensadores proporcionados no sean los adecuados para el rango de frecuencia y Duty Cycle deseados. En tal caso, puede que tengas que utilizar otros valores de componentes.

    electrostaty41

    1 Comment

    1 Star


  • SmokeSensor_Rev1_Debug g1JF

    SmokeSensor_Rev1_Debug g1JF

    Template for a shield connected to an Arduino Uno/Bluno. Note, the pin out for this was designed specifically for a Bluno, but it should be pin compatible with an Arduino Uno

    maxxrev

    1 Comment

    1 Star


  • Triple-Axis Accelerometer 4gi1

    Triple-Axis Accelerometer 4gi1

    The LIS3DH is a very popular low power triple-axis accelerometer. It's low-cost, but has just about every 'extra' you'd want in an accelerometer. This sensor communicates over I2C or SPI (our library code supports both) so you can share it with a bunch of other sensors on the same I2C bus. There's an address selection pin so you can have two accelerometers share an I2C bus

    oozliuoo

    1 Comment

    1 Star


  • Triple-Axis Accelerometer

    Triple-Axis Accelerometer

    The LIS3DH is a very popular low power triple-axis accelerometer. It's low-cost, but has just about every 'extra' you'd want in an accelerometer. This sensor communicates over I2C or SPI (our library code supports both) so you can share it with a bunch of other sensors on the same I2C bus. There's an address selection pin so you can have two accelerometers share an I2C bus

    oozliuoo

    1 Comment

    1 Star


  • Triple-Axis Accelerometer 1ah4

    Triple-Axis Accelerometer 1ah4

    The LIS3DH is a very popular low power triple-axis accelerometer. It's low-cost, but has just about every 'extra' you'd want in an accelerometer. This sensor communicates over I2C or SPI (our library code supports both) so you can share it with a bunch of other sensors on the same I2C bus. There's an address selection pin so you can have two accelerometers share an I2C bus

    oozliuoo

    1 Comment

    1 Star


  • PIN_Headers_40

    PIN_Headers_40

    2x20 Pin Header (2mm pitch)

    mustafadut

    1 Star


  • MPXV7002DP

    MPXV7002DP

    Through Hole straight pin header, 01x03, 2.54mm pitch, single row #connector #pinheader #tht

    flyboy101

    1 Star


  • Realistic Brown Battle Mech

    Realistic Brown Battle Mech

    Nice — you can do a clean pulse + latch using a single quad Schmitt-NAND chip: 74HC132 (or 74LVC132 for 3.3 V systems). The HC132 contains four 2-input NAND gates with Schmitt inputs so you can both clean a noisy SYN480R DATA line and build an SR latch (NAND SR is active-LOW) inside one package. Only a few passives and a driver transistor are needed. Below is a ready-to-build recipe (parts, wiring, explanation, tuning tips, and an ASCII schematic) — no extra logic ICs required. Parts (per latch) 1 × 74HC132 (quad 2-input NAND with Schmitt inputs). If your system is 3.3 V use 74LVC132 / 74HC132 rated for 3.3 V. Rin = 47 kΩ (input series) Cfilter = 10 nF (input RC to ground) — tweak for debounce/clean time Rpulldown = 100 kΩ (pull-down at input node, optional) Rpullup = 100 kΩ (pull-up for active-LOW R input so reset is idle HIGH) Rbase = 10 kΩ, Q = 2N2222 (NPN) or small N-MOSFET (2N7002) to drive your load Diode for relay flyback (1N4001) if you drive a coil Optional small cap 0.1 µF decoupling at VCC of IC Concept / how it works (short) Use Gate1 (G1) of 74HC132 as a Schmitt inverter by tying its two inputs together and feeding a small RC filter from SYN480R.DATA. This removes HF noise and provides a clean logic transition. Because it's a NAND with tied inputs its function becomes an inverter with Schmitt behavior. Use G2 & G3 as the cross-coupled NAND pair forming an SR latch (active-LOW inputs S̄ and R̄). A low on S̄ sets Q = HIGH. A low on R̄ resets Q = LOW. Wire the cleaned/inverted output of G1 to S̄. A valid received pulse (DATA high) produces a clean LOW on S̄ (because G1 inverts), setting the latch reliably even if the pulse is brief. R̄ is your reset input (pushbutton, HT12D VT, MCU line, etc.) — idle pulled HIGH. Q drives an NPN/MOSFET to switch your load (relay, LED, etc.). Recommended wiring (pin mapping, assume one chip; use datasheet pin numbers) I’ll refer to the 4 gates as G1, G2, G3, G4. Use G4 optionally for additional conditioning or to build a toggler later. SYN480R.DATA --- Rin (47k) ---+--- Node A ---||--- Cfilter (10nF) --- GND | Rpulldown (100k) --- GND (optional, keeps node low) Node A -> both inputs of G1 (tie inputs A and B of Gate1 together) G1 output -> S̄ (S_bar) (input1 of Gate2) Gate2 (G2): inputs = S̄ and Q̄ -> output = Q Gate3 (G3): inputs = R̄ and Q -> output = Q̄ R̄ --- Rpullup (100k) --- VCC (reset is idle HIGH; pull low to reset) (optional) R̄ can be wired to a reset pushbutton to GND or to an MCU pin Q -> Rbase (10k) -> base of 2N2222 (emitter GND; collector to one side of relay coil) Other side of relay coil -> +V (appropriate coil voltage) Diode across coil If you prefer MOSFET low side switching: Q -> gate resistor 100Ω -> gate of 2N7002 2N7002 source -> GND ; drain -> relay coil low side

    prishvin

    1 Star


  • EV5920-5048-V-00A Evaluation Board

    EV5920-5048-V-00A Evaluation Board

    This is a recreation of the [EV5920-5048-V-00A](https://www.monolithicpower.com/en/ev5920-5048-v-00a.html) from MPS which demonstrates a MP5920 Hot-Swap controller commanding 5 MP5048 e-fuses in parallel. WIP Items: -Routing In flux, this project demonstrates hierarchal design through the use of modules. Additionally, parametric symbols are used extensively to improve schematic cleanliness. Components in the canvas are locked because their positions correspond to the same positions as the original layout. Changelog from Original MPS Design: - Not including GPIO2 or GPIO3 as included in the original board due to NC pin name on the IC. - PC1 and PC2 footprints are 5mm in pitch and 12.5mm in diameter rather than the 16mm diameter in the original layout. This change corresponds with the selected part more accurately. -Renamed Designators to be More Verbose

    vasy_skral

    1 Star


  • EV5920-5048-V-00A Evaluation Board

    EV5920-5048-V-00A Evaluation Board

    This is a recreation of the [EV5920-5048-V-00A](https://www.monolithicpower.com/en/ev5920-5048-v-00a.html) from MPS which demonstrates a MP5920 Hot-Swap controller commanding 5 MP5048 e-fuses in parallel. In Flux, this project demonstrates hierarchical design through the use of modules. Additionally, parametric symbols are used extensively to improve schematic cleanliness. Components in the canvas are locked because their positions correspond to the same positions as the original layout. Changelog from Original MPS Design: - Not including GPIO2 or GPIO3 as included in the original board due to NC pin name on the IC. - PC1 and PC2 footprints are 5mm in pitch and 12.5mm in diameter rather than the 16mm diameter in the original layout. This change corresponds with the selected part more accurately. -Renamed Designators to be More Verbose

    monolithicpower

    &

    jharwinbarrozo

    1 Star


  • Fellow Pink Massive Robot Spider

    Fellow Pink Massive Robot Spider

    Welcome to your new project. Imagine what you can build here.

    esney

    80 Comments

    1 Star


  • Evolutionary Pink Tricorder

    Evolutionary Pink Tricorder

    Welcome to your new project. Imagine what you can build here.

    l4zzaro1

    4 Comments

    1 Star


  • Underground Pink Hoverboard

    Underground Pink Hoverboard

    Welcome to your new project. Imagine what you can build here.

    erfa

    1 Comment

    1 Star


  • Secure Pink KITT

    Secure Pink KITT

    Welcome to your new project. Imagine what you can build here.

    yoshua02

    1 Comment

    1 Star


  • Light Pink Flux Capacitor

    Light Pink Flux Capacitor

    Industrial ESP32-S3 MicroPython Controller with USB Hub, HDMI Output, Isolated Relay, and Buzzer Driver

    jlarrarte13

    1 Star


  • Horizontal Pink Electronic Thumb

    Horizontal Pink Electronic Thumb

    nRF52840 Bluetooth 5.0 Sensor Node with Robust Power and Enhanced RF Performance

    sbkim

    1 Star


  • Kind Pink Ecto Goggles

    Kind Pink Ecto Goggles

    Welcome to your new project. Imagine what you can build here.

    frosterx

    &

    miller12x

    1 Star


  • Loose Pink Gadget Copter

    Loose Pink Gadget Copter

    Welcome to your new project. Imagine what you can build here.

    electroner

    1 Star


  • Handicapped Pink Antigravity Battle Room

    Handicapped Pink Antigravity Battle Room

    Welcome to your new project. Imagine what you can build here.

    masia

    1 Star



  • Okay Pink Dejarik

    Okay Pink Dejarik

    Welcome to your new project. Imagine what you can build here.

    rf-user64915138

    1 Star



  • Voiceless Pink P.K.E. Meter

    Voiceless Pink P.K.E. Meter

    Welcome to your new project. Imagine what you can build here.

    rf-user459422311

    1 Star



  • Early Pink Electromagnetic Shrinking Machine

    Early Pink Electromagnetic Shrinking Machine

    Welcome to your new project. Imagine what you can build here.

    rf-user809616184

    1 Star