Microcontrôleur ARM 32 bits Arduino Due
Description
- It contains everything you need to support the microcontroller.
- Power it with an AC/DC adapter or battery to get it going
- Compatible with all Arduino shields working at 3.3 V
- Arduino board based on 32-bit ARM current microcontroller
The Arduino Due 32-bit ARM Microcontroller is a microcontroller board based on an ARM Atmel SAM3X8E Cortex-M3 processor. It is the first Arduino board based on a 32-bit ARM core microcontroller. It has 54 digital input/output pins (12 of which can be used as PWM outputs), 12 analog inputs, 4 UARTs (serial ports physical), an 84 MHz clock, a connection allowing USB-OTG, 2 CAN (digital/analog converter), 2 TWI, a power socket, an SPI base, a JTAG socket, a reset button and a clear button.

- Wine. The input voltage to the Arduino board when using an external power source (as opposed to 5V from the USB connection or other regulated power source). You can supply voltage through this pin, or, if power comes through the electrical outlet, access it through this pin.
- 5V . The pin outputs regulated 5 V from the board regulator. The board can be powered with power from the DC power jack (7 to 12 V), the USB connector (5 V), or the VIN pin of the board (7 to 12 V). Supply voltage across the 5 or 3.3V pins bypasses the regulator and can damage your board. We do not recommend it.
- 3.3V . A 3.3 V power supply generated by the integrated regulator. The maximum current flow is 800 mA. This regulator also provides power to the SAM3X microcontroller.
- GND . The Earth (ground) pins.
- IOREF . This pin on the Arduino board provides the reference voltage at which the microcontroller operates. A properly configured shield can read the IOREF pin voltage and select the appropriate power source or enable the voltage converters on the outputs to work at 5 or 3.3 V.
Fichier PDF
- Microcontroller: AT91SAM3X8E
- Operating voltage: 3.3V
- Input voltage (recommended): 7 to 12 V
- Input voltage (limits): 6 to 20 V
- Digital I/O pins: 54 (12 of which power the MID output)
- Analog input pins: 12
- Analog output pins: 2 (DAC)
- Total DC output current on all I/O lines: 130 mA
- DC current for 3.3 V pin: 800 mA
- DC current for 5 V pin: 800 mA
- Flash memory: 512 KB fully available for user applications
- SRAM memory: 96 KB (two banks: 64 and 32 KB)
- Clock speed: 84 MHz
We used this to make a button box with arcade buttons that emulates a joystick on a Windows PC. Worked great.
This board has more CPU power than other non-OS-based boards from Arduino. For real-time closed-loop applications where a non-realtime OS would introduce jitter, this board is a great option. Occasionally we had an issue in the past where the board would squeal audibly when an external circuit was powered from the Due's 5V pin, but this seems to be resolved in the latest batches of boards. I'm very happy with Arduino's high end processors, and I hope an M4 board (i.e. Star Otto or equivalent) becomes available soon.
Thank you for ship my order very fast, but next time I hope you place better protection on your package, you can separate different product with bubble wrap, so package for every product still good Robotshop always ship original and high quality products :)
où puis-je acheter un kit pour Arduino DUE car je ne les trouve pas en ligne
More $$ for this board than from Shenzhen but you avoid the Rev3 10k resistor failure documented here https://www.dimdim.gr/2016/03/fixing-startup-issues-with-arduino-dues/ That is, these boards include this DUE correction. Yessir. There is also a custom fabricated header (despite that beige? is a dreary colour choice for this item) with pin labels — this is much welcomed when routing to the +100 pins. Aaaand, it's got a comfy transparent base that will allow your lab partners to take your powered DUEs and set them on a pile of metal bits — and voila, nothing shorts out.