XO Stick: Difference between revisions
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* Install the [http://arduino.cc/en/Main/Software Arduino IDE] in Gnome or [http://wiki.sugarlabs.org/go/Activities/Terminal Terminal] and use it to program the Arduinos as stand alone robotics experiments |
* Install the [http://arduino.cc/en/Main/Software Arduino IDE] in Gnome or [http://wiki.sugarlabs.org/go/Activities/Terminal Terminal] and use it to program the Arduinos as stand alone robotics experiments |
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* Load the Arduino with [[Arduino#Firmata|Firmata]] software (once only using the Arduino IDE) and use the Arduino as an Input/Output board for [http://wiki.sugarlabs.org/go/Activities/TurtleArt#Arduino Turtle Art] |
* Load the Arduino with [[Arduino#Firmata|Firmata]] software (once only using the Arduino IDE) and use the Arduino as an Input/Output board for [http://wiki.sugarlabs.org/go/Activities/TurtleArt#Arduino Turtle Art] |
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[[File:Xostick-with-xo.JPG|300px]] |
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= Assembly notes = |
= Assembly notes = |
Revision as of 02:03, 21 March 2013
Background
The XOrduino and XO Stick are Arduino compatible single board computers. A blank circuit board for each is included with every XO-4 touchscreen computer. These boards can be populated with inexpensive (US$5 approximately) components. Some soldering skills are required, the XOstick is recommended for beginners because it has no surface mount components.
The boards can be used in robotics experiments in two ways:
- Install the Arduino IDE in Gnome or Terminal and use it to program the Arduinos as stand alone robotics experiments
- Load the Arduino with Firmata software (once only using the Arduino IDE) and use the Arduino as an Input/Output board for Turtle Art
Assembly notes
- Break off the 2 tabs and glue (superglue? cyanoacrylate?) them to the plug on the non copper side to make the board thick enough to plug into a USB connector. Use as little glue as possible -- together, the three layers of board (at .8mm each) exactly match the nominal USB specification for the plug thickness (i.e., .24mm). too much glue will make the connector not fit.
- When choosing components, note that the holes for the component leads are sized for modern, tiny, components. The old 1/4W resistors in your junk tray, or the LEDs you've been saving for 10 years until you have a use for them, might not fit.
- LEDs are polarized, flat side should be down (towards big USB port). The LEDs are optional, but at least one can be quite useful.
- Zener diodes are polarized, make the black stripe match the stripe on the board. If the USB will never be used, for programming or in operation, then the zeners are optional.
- The large capacitor is polarized, observe the +- marks.
- The IC's are 'polarized' the notch on the PCB and socket match the dot (pin 1) of the IC.
- The board supports either the Attiny 85 (8 pin) or 861 (20 pin) IC, but not both plugged in at once.
- All the components are mounted on the board top (the side with the white labels)
- You probably will want to install the Arduino boot loader on the IC
The assembled board (an early version, lacking the prototyping area of later editions). Note the orientation of the IC, LEDs, diodes and big capacitor - IC dot top right, LED flat sides bottom, diode bar to the right and capacitor "-" to the bottom.
Burning the bootloader
There is no stable bootloader yet but in theory you can burn the bootloader onto an unprogrammed ATTiny IC (8 or 20 pin) with another Arduino XO_Stick/Bootloader
Programming
AVR Stick firmware will work unmodified (for the ATtiny85 version): http://www.sparkfun.com/products/9147
Sample programming command:
avrdude -c usbtiny -pattiny85 -U flash:w:main.hex -U hfuse:w:0xdd:m -U lfuse:w:0xe1:m
Or "make fuse program" from the AVR Stick source distribution.
Do this as root if you need to (then go fix your udev by adding something like the following as /etc/udev/rules.d/10-usbtiny.rules
SUBSYSTEM!="usb|usb_device", GOTO="usbtiny_rules_end" ACTION!="add", GOTO="usbtiny_rules_end" ATTRS{idVendor}=="1781", ATTRS{idProduct}=="0c9f", MODE="0664", GROUP="plugdev" LABEL="usbtiny_rules_end"
Would be nice to eventually have an assembly guide as detailed as the one for http://www.sparkfun.com/products/10547
C. Scott's other notes
Notes on v5:
- ATtiny261A should be at least ATtiny461a if not ATtiny861a, since USB library takes up 2496 bytes.
- full size USB convert to mini or micro? (no through-hole micro-B connectors?)
- LED1/LED2 need better polarity mark (flat side is down, towards big usb port)
- use '-kit' suffixed versions of footprints (solder mask on component side)
- break off tab appears to work well.
- island between tabs should be anchored to body, not tabs?
- can we avoid anchors on break off tabs, instead use central anchor?
ie. T ------------ | | -- \-- TXT| | -- \-- | | ------------ T where T indicates tabs.
- remove symmetry from USB connector placement to allow two tabs on XOrduino board. (ie, move connector all the way down)
Distribution
1. cjb 2. cjb 3. Steve Pomeroy 4. Quozl 5. Mike Lee 6. Pippin Wallace 7. Pippin Wallace 8. Sridhar Dhanapalan 9. Tony Forster 10. Javier Andres Galaz Jeria 11. Alan Jhonn Aguiar Schwyn 12. Stephen Thomas 13. Ricardo Moran 14. George Hunt 15. Juan Cubillo 19. cscott (no pcb)
Sources
http://github.com/cscott/xostick -- look at the "A1" tag for the schematics for the A1 boards. Latest XO Stick is at HEAD, targetted for the B1 build.
See also
Links
http://www.sparkfun.com/datasheets/Widgets/AVR-Stick-v12.pdf indicative circuit diagram XOstick1 https://github.com/cscott/xostick/blob/master/XO-Stick2-sch.pdf circuit diagram XOstick2 http://arduino.cc/en/Tutorial/ArduinoISP programming the bootloader with another Arduino https://www.sparkfun.com/products/9825 pocket programmer http://www.atmel.com/Images/doc2586.pdf datasheet Attiny85 (the 8 pin chip) http://www.atmel.com/Images/doc2588.pdf datasheet Attiny861 (the 20 pin chip) https://github.com/cscott/xostick circuit board artwork, drill table, bill of materials and notes https://groups.google.com/forum/?hl=en&fromgroups#!forum/xorduino Google interest group http://cananian.livejournal.com/66129.html and http://cananian.livejournal.com/66654.html blog http://www.sparkfun.com/tutorials/106 a soldering tutorial