Get-Started-with-Arduino-Clones.pdf

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Get Started with Arduino Clones
Get Started with Arduino Clones
Written By: Chandler
TOOLS:
Soldering/desoldering tools (1)
Wire stripper/crimper (1)
PARTS:
9 Volt alkaline battery (1)
9 volt battery snap connector (1)
Arduino clone (1)
7805 Voltage Regulator (1)
Mini breadboard (1)
LED (1)
insulated wrapping wire (1)
25 pin female solderable DSUB (1)
misc resistors (1)
Female connector header (2)
ATMega328 (1)
SUMMARY
Here you will learn how to wire the Arduino clone up and how to start your first project. In
this tutorial, I am working with a breadboardable ATMega Lite Dev Kit from
SurplusGizmos.com,
but this can apply to other Arduino clones, too, such as the Ardweeny
kit in the
Maker Shed.
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www.makeprojects.com
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Get Started with Arduino Clones
Note: this tutorial is meant to be followed after you have soldered your Arduino clone
together. Now, without further ado, let's dive in!
Step 1 — Get Started with Arduino Clones
WARNING: ATTEMPT AT YOUR
OWN RISK! I have found that my
Arduino clone is partially
dysfunctional (will run TV and LED,
but not speaker or LCD). Here are
the parts that you will need. They
are, from left to right, a 6 or 9 volt
battery pack, misc. wire, an
Arduino clone, a breadboard, and a
7805 voltage regulator.
Step 2
Place the Arduino clone on the
breadboard, with one row of pins on
either side of the breadboard.
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Get Started with Arduino Clones
Step 3
Now, on the "front" side of the
breadboard, next to the Arduino
clone, place the 7805 chip with the
heatsink facing away from you.
Step 4
Next, let's hook up the battery
pack. Put the positive (red) probe
into the same row as the far left pin
of the 7805, and put the negative
(black) probe into the negative bus
(the line of pins with the blue line
over it). Also, run a wire from the
row with the middle pin of the 7805
to the negative bus, and run a wire
from the right pin to the positive
bus.
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Get Started with Arduino Clones
Step 5
It's starting to get a tad more
complex. Run wires from the
positive bus to the rows with the
pins labeled "VCC" and "AV," and
run wires from the negative bus to
the rows with both of the "GND"
pins.
Step 6
Nice job! The LED on the board
should light up. If it doesn't, make
sure that you have done all of the
steps correctly, and that you
soldered your clone correctly. Now,
assemble a "parallel programmer,"
which is a device that hooks into a
Windows or Linux computer (if it
originally ran Windows) that will
program this device. If you have a
AVRISP or other programmer, then
use that instead.
Here
is how to
build a parallel programmer.
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www.makeprojects.com
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Get Started with Arduino Clones
Step 7
Now, let's build our first project!
Collect the parts shown (LED, wire,
and 330 ohm resistor).
Step 8
See the wire on the right? Connect
a wire from one negative bus to the
other.
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www.makeprojects.com
Page 5 of 8
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