HobbyKing
Arduino Uno R3 Microcontroller - Atmel ATmega328
6 reviews
Microcontroller | ATmega328 |
Input Voltage (recommended) | 7-12V |
Input Voltage (limits) | 6-20V |
DC Current per I/O Pin | 40 mA |
DC Current for 3.3V Pin | 50 mA |
SRAM | 2 KB (ATmega328) |
EEPROM | 1 KB (ATmega328) |
Clock Speed | 16MHz |
of the board has the following new features:, 1.0 pinout: added SDA and SCL pins that are near to the AREF pin and two other new pins placed near to the RESET pin, the IOREF that allow the shields to adapt to the voltage provided from the board. In the future, shields will be compatible both with the boards that use the AVR, (which operates @ 5V) and with the Arduino Due that operate @ 3.3V. The second one is a not connected pin, that is reserved for future purposes., *Note:, This is not an original Arduino brand product, it is manufactured with the same components and functionality by a different manufacturer., Specs:, Operating Voltage:5V, Digital I/O Pins:14, Analog Input Pins:6, Flash Memory:, 32 KB (ATmega328) of which 0.5 KB used by bootloader, Includes:, 1 x Arduino Uno R3 Microcontroller board,
The Arduino Uno is a microcontroller board based on the ATmega328. It has 14 digital input/output pins (of which 6 can be used as PWM outputs), 6 analog inputs, a 16 MHz crystal oscillator, a USB connection, a power jack, an ICSP header, and a reset button. It contains everything needed to support the microcontroller; simply connect it to a computer with a USB cable or power it with a AC-to-DC adapter or battery to get started.
The Uno differs from all preceding boards in that it does not use the FTDI USB-to-serial driver chip. Instead, it features the Atmega16U2 (Atmega8U2 up to version R2) programmed as a USB-to-serial converter.
Revision 2
of the Uno board has a resistor pulling the 8U2 HWB line to ground, making it easier to put into DFU mode.
Revision 3
(of which 6 provide PWM output)
1 x USB cable
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Found 11 years, 1 month ago