Difference between revisions of "Hardware List"

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* [[SG90 Servo]] Micro Servo Motor, 3x in the [[LMUBox]]
 
* [[SG90 Servo]] Micro Servo Motor, 3x in the [[LMUBox]]
 
* [[Stepper Motor and ULN2003]] 28BYJ-48 ULN2003 5V Stepper Motor + ULN2003 Driver Board; 2x in the [[LMUBox]]
 
* [[Stepper Motor and ULN2003]] 28BYJ-48 ULN2003 5V Stepper Motor + ULN2003 Driver Board; 2x in the [[LMUBox]]
* [[IRF520 Module]] Power MOSFET switching module ('electronic relay')
+
* Power MOSFET switching module ('electronic relay'), e.g., [[IRF520 Module]], [[L298N]] dual module,
 
* [[OLED LCD Display]], e.g., [[128 x 32 OLED Display]]
 
* [[OLED LCD Display]], e.g., [[128 x 32 OLED Display]]
* [[Motor Driver]], e.g., [[L298N]]
 
 
* ...
 
* ...
 
* [[Raspberry Pi]]
 
* [[Raspberry Pi]]

Revision as of 13:27, 15 June 2024

Sketching with hardware requires some hardware components. To create a functional prototype, we typically need a microcontroller, sensors, actuators, and components to link the parts together.

Only a small set of parts is required to get started and follow the course. You can do many of the exercises and tutorials with only a microcontroller (e.g., ESP32, ESP8266), a few LEDs, and some resistors. We recommend getting started, and once you like building things, then get a hardware kit.

In the following list, we marked the components in the LMU hardware box with LMUBox.

Microcontroller and Main Boards

Actuators

Sensors (and physical controllers)

Components

Tools and Connectors

Wearables / Smart Watches