Hey Steve,
Well I tried giving it some time, but still no good. No LED. Not really sure which bits I should measure to find the fault. I checked voltage on the LED at the board and it reads only around 1volt no matter what I do with the heater button.
Any ideas? Not quite sure what to test first to figure this out. should I measure the voltage across the heater screw in terminals?
Cheers
Rob
Does anyone know the dimension of the malt pipe and vessel of the original 20 liter braumiester. e.g.. diameter and height.
Hi all,
I'm new to the home brewing but not controller applications. After meeting with a client at home regarding his LED Lighting system we cracked open one of his home brewed Pumpkin Ales. I was very impressed. I thought everything to brew would be to hard to get a hang of. But after reading this thread and another by Steve I figured i'd start next year and give it a try. But any ways...on the subject of Steve's Shield. How would an all-in-one unit sound that comes pre-programmed with the firmware? Using an FTDI cable to upload new sketches. I've worked mostly with aquarium and hydroponics clients but figured what the heck if on of my controllers can be modified to work with Steve's coding then why not. For those of you familiar with the Typhon LED controller i've taken DWMZ's design a bit further and updated it to include 2 inputs for temp sensors and an output for I2C communications via 3 USB-Mini connectors. Have attached the updated typhon pic. But for those of you still looking how's it sound? It'd be a 50mmx100mm footprint, 4-buttons, and 16x2 LCD with the outputs/inputs from Steve's Shield.
Hi all,
I'm new to the home brewing but not controller applications. After meeting with a client at home regarding his LED Lighting system we cracked open one of his home brewed Pumpkin Ales. I was very impressed. I thought everything to brew would be to hard to get a hang of. But after reading this thread and another by Steve I figured i'd start next year and give it a try. But any ways...on the subject of Steve's Shield. How would an all-in-one unit sound that comes pre-programmed with the firmware? Using an FTDI cable to upload new sketches. I've worked mostly with aquarium and hydroponics clients but figured what the heck if on of my controllers can be modified to work with Steve's coding then why not. For those of you familiar with the Typhon LED controller i've taken DWMZ's design a bit further and updated it to include 2 inputs for temp sensors and an output for I2C communications via 3 USB-Mini connectors. Have attached the updated typhon pic. But for those of you still looking how's it sound? It'd be a 50mmx100mm footprint, 4-buttons, and 16x2 LCD with the outputs/inputs from Steve's Shield.
So I managed to throw something together real quick in the 2.0 Version....have a look.
From the looks of it the push buttons have pull down resistors on them, my design has pull up resistors so the code would need to be changed to reflect that.
Hey Steve,
Well I tried giving it some time, but still no good. No LED. Not really sure which bits I should measure to find the fault. I checked voltage on the LED at the board and it reads only around 1volt no matter what I do with the heater button.
Any ideas? Not quite sure what to test first to figure this out. should I measure the voltage across the heater screw in terminals?
Cheers
Rob
I love your enthusiasm, Liquidarts, but it seems counter-productive to me, to change the pinouts when there are already 60 existing boards in circulation, with another batch of 10 on the way and an unknown sized batch being fabbed by a user in the USA. It just sounds like an unnecessary fork of the code.That's correct Steve. And I also changed the pinouts. Right now with this basic design there are a few free pins left. Maybe at a later date/revision i'll use an I2C chip for the LCD and the buttons to open up all the pins for other inputs/outputs. The possibilities are endless too....BT or Wifi notifications. Pressure sensor for the fermentation part....lol....can't stop thinking...
I love your enthusiasm, Liquidarts, but it seems counter-productive to me, to change the pinouts when there are already 60 existing boards in circulation, with another batch of 10 on the way and an unknown sized batch being fabbed by a user in the USA. It just sounds like an unnecessary fork of the code.
Thanks Rob
I placed an order for 10 boards last night so I may have a few spares now.
Cheers.
PS. Can you tell me where is the best place to obtain the LCD panel and needed components.
Yeah, I think an all in one would be great, and even better if you can panelise them onto a single panel and get them cheap. If you find you can't use the same pinout, how about adding some compiler preprocessor #ifdef directives to differentiate the boards but keep a single codebase?Hi Bonj,
I see what your saying. I'll go back and take a look at the original pinout and see if I can change it back. I believe the reason I did so in the first place was because the pins from the chip actually crossed over one another for the LCD and Buttons with a limited amount of space for top and bottom vias. My original plan was to do a 100 pcb's as the cost would be cheaper per board than say 10 or even 50. The company I have a steady relationship with can do all 100 for under $50. I get that discount because i've had them fully populate the boards of my other designs as well as just the PCB fab.
Martin
Yeah, I think an all in one would be great, and even better if you can panelise them onto a single panel and get them cheap. If you find you can't use the same pinout, how about adding some compiler preprocessor #ifdef directives to differentiate the boards but keep a single codebase?
I mostly user element14 (when I'm ordering enough to qualify for their free postage) and rs components... depending on where the parts are cheaper etc. Even then, some parts are cheaper to order from hobbyist parts suppliers in the USA, even with shipping.I use Mouser or Digikey for almost all my part orders......but for bulk I get everything on flea-bay from China...especially all my SMD components.
HmmmThat's actually not a bad idea...
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