You do the pcb design yourself using Altium or Kicad or Fritzing, or you hire someone to do it for you.
this is a short video clip , this man creates a very basic led light blinking , now once your happy with it how do u move on making the real thing or maybe shift all them to another breadboard without arduino connected.
See for yourself: the Arduino web site gives a complete schematic diagram for the Uno Rev 3. Take that as a starting point....and what about the wiring ,how do i connect them , are these wires making connections to the ic legs directly
To add to above.See for yourself: the Arduino web site gives a complete schematic diagram for the Uno Rev 3. Take that as a starting point.
Before I get to 1 and 2.ok thanks for all your replies just so that i understand may i stick to simple answers.
just what you se in this video till the end after he places all the led's on bredboard how does he place the wires in bredboard ?
1: do i take the ic out of the arduino board and place it in plain bredboard.
2: do then wire the wire's up to the ic legs 11,12,13 pin?
is that how it is
ok.. simple it is..ok thanks for all your replies just so that i understand may i stick to simple answers.
just what you se in this video till the end after he places all the led's on bredboard how does he place the wires in bredboard ?
1: do i take the ic out of the arduino board and place it in plain bredboard.
2: do then wire the wire's up to the ic legs 11,12,13 pin?
Uno has a lot of parts that a final project may not need. Uno also relatively large, particularly for drone applications where every gram of mass counts.Generally, you don't move the parts to a new circuit board, you just incorporate the Arduino circuit board in your new assembly.
If you are set up to program AVR controllers with, for example an ET-AVR-ISP-MK2 clone, you should be able to program the hex file into an ATMEGA328 and use the ATMEGA328 along with the 16 Mhz crystal (see the schematic in the link OBW0549 provided in post #5) on the new board.
To use the AVRISP MKII clone you will need to run AVRStudio 4.18 under Windows.
There are probably other methods but this is the only one that comes to mind that does not involve extra hardware be put on the board to communicate with the Arduio development system. In essence the AVRISP replaces the USB controller (U3) on the Arduino board but it is a separate assembly that is disconnected after programming and verification.
by Aaron Carman
by Aaron Carman
by Aaron Carman