Arduino Uno to ATmega328 - Shrinking your Arduino Projects
Full article at https://dbot.ws/atmega328
More projects and tutorials at https://dronebotworkshop.com
Help me to help you! Sign up for my newsletter at https://dbot.ws/dbnews
Star Wars music sketch on GitHub - https://gist.github.com/nicksort/4736535
In this final episode of 2018, I will show you how to take the projects you have built using an Arduino Uno and “shrinkify” them down to an ATmega328 chip. This will allow you to make a permanent version of your project without using up one of your precious Arduino boards.
The ATmega328 is the microcontroller chip at the heart of the Arduino Uno. It is available in several packages, we will focus on the common 28-pin DIP (Dual Inline Package).
You only need a handful of components to turn an ATmega328 chip into a fully-functional Arduino Uno equivalent. It’s much cheaper and a lot smaller, allowing you to build a permanent version of your design onto a small circuit board.
I will also show you three methods of programming the ATmega328 chip, after all an Arduino isn’t very useful if you can’t upload a sketch to it!
To illustrate my point I will put together a very simple yet cute “music box” using an Arduino Uno, and then we’ll move the project onto an ATmega328. It will be of particular interest to Star Wars fans as the “music box” plays “The Imperial March”. If you have an old Darth Vader or Storm Trouper toy it would be neat to build it into it!
I cannot take any credit for the sketch I used to create the Star Wars music box, the code was written by Nick Sort about 6 years ago and is available on GitHub - https://gist.github.com/nicksort/4736535 . It’s an excellent example of making simple music with the Arduino.
Here is the Table of Contents for this video:
The ATmega328 - 3:29
Star Wars Arduino Project - 5:50
Star Wars Sketch - 8:35
Build an “Arduino” with ATmega328 - 15:14
Loading the Program - Using Arduino Method 1 - 21:31
Loading the Program - Using Arduino Method 2 - 24:50
Loading the Program - Using FTDI Adapter - 30:01
As always you will find an accompanying article for this video on the DroneBot Workshop website at https://dbot.ws/atmega328.
And while you are there please sign up for my newsletter so that you can stay informed about upcoming projects and, more importantly, let me know what subjects and projects you would like to see me make videos and article about. You can sign up using this link - https://dbot.ws/dbnews.
And a special thank you for all of your support in 2018. We are now over 50 thousand subscribers and that’s both amazing and humbling, I owe it all to my wonderful viewers.
All the best for a healthy and prosperous 2019. Hope to see you in the workshop next year!
Видео Arduino Uno to ATmega328 - Shrinking your Arduino Projects канала DroneBot Workshop
More projects and tutorials at https://dronebotworkshop.com
Help me to help you! Sign up for my newsletter at https://dbot.ws/dbnews
Star Wars music sketch on GitHub - https://gist.github.com/nicksort/4736535
In this final episode of 2018, I will show you how to take the projects you have built using an Arduino Uno and “shrinkify” them down to an ATmega328 chip. This will allow you to make a permanent version of your project without using up one of your precious Arduino boards.
The ATmega328 is the microcontroller chip at the heart of the Arduino Uno. It is available in several packages, we will focus on the common 28-pin DIP (Dual Inline Package).
You only need a handful of components to turn an ATmega328 chip into a fully-functional Arduino Uno equivalent. It’s much cheaper and a lot smaller, allowing you to build a permanent version of your design onto a small circuit board.
I will also show you three methods of programming the ATmega328 chip, after all an Arduino isn’t very useful if you can’t upload a sketch to it!
To illustrate my point I will put together a very simple yet cute “music box” using an Arduino Uno, and then we’ll move the project onto an ATmega328. It will be of particular interest to Star Wars fans as the “music box” plays “The Imperial March”. If you have an old Darth Vader or Storm Trouper toy it would be neat to build it into it!
I cannot take any credit for the sketch I used to create the Star Wars music box, the code was written by Nick Sort about 6 years ago and is available on GitHub - https://gist.github.com/nicksort/4736535 . It’s an excellent example of making simple music with the Arduino.
Here is the Table of Contents for this video:
The ATmega328 - 3:29
Star Wars Arduino Project - 5:50
Star Wars Sketch - 8:35
Build an “Arduino” with ATmega328 - 15:14
Loading the Program - Using Arduino Method 1 - 21:31
Loading the Program - Using Arduino Method 2 - 24:50
Loading the Program - Using FTDI Adapter - 30:01
As always you will find an accompanying article for this video on the DroneBot Workshop website at https://dbot.ws/atmega328.
And while you are there please sign up for my newsletter so that you can stay informed about upcoming projects and, more importantly, let me know what subjects and projects you would like to see me make videos and article about. You can sign up using this link - https://dbot.ws/dbnews.
And a special thank you for all of your support in 2018. We are now over 50 thousand subscribers and that’s both amazing and humbling, I owe it all to my wonderful viewers.
All the best for a healthy and prosperous 2019. Hope to see you in the workshop next year!
Видео Arduino Uno to ATmega328 - Shrinking your Arduino Projects канала DroneBot Workshop
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
Другие видео канала
The Arduino Family - Uno - Mega - Nano - Pro Mini -ATtiny85Electronic Basics #6: Standalone Arduino CircuitHow to use the Atmel ATTINY10 MicrocontrollerFrom Idea to Schematic to PCB - How to do it easily!Best Way to Burn Arduino Bootloaders Tutorial!Power For Your Electronics Projects - Voltage Regulators and ConvertersATX Bench Power Supply - Convert a Computer Power SupplyUsing Basic Logic Gates - With & Without ArduinoRaspberry Pi GPIO - Getting Started with gpiozeroControl Large Gearmotors with PWM & ArduinoI2C Part 1 - Using 2 ArduinosBreadboarding & Prototyping for Electronics, Arduino & Raspberry PiArduino NANO Propeller LED Analog ClockImprove your Arduino programming skills - Using the ATmega328P registers.$2 Arduino The ATMEGA328 as a stand alone Easy, cheap and very small A complete guide#163 Flash your ATMega328P using THIS for the cost of a cup of coffeeUsing SD Cards with Arduino - Record Servo Motor Movements1-Day Project: Build Your Own Arduino Uno for $5Arduino Basics 101: Hardware Overview, Fundamental Code Commands