Page 1 of 5
Photon Wearable Shield Hookup Guide
Introduction
The SparkFun Photon Wearable Shield breaks out each pin on the Photon,
so it is easier to use the Photon in WiFi wearables projects. Due to the
large pins, you can also use other conductive materials like copper tape
and conductive paint for non-wearable projects.
Please Note: All SparkFun shields for the Photon are also compatible
with the Core from Particle. The WKP, DAC and VBT pins on the
Photon will be labeled A7, A6 and 3V3*, respectively, on the Core, but
will not alter the functionality of any of the Shields.
Suggested Reading
If you have never worked with the Photon or the Core before, we highly
recommend visiting the getting started documentation available on the
Particle site.
If you are unfamiliar with any of the concepts below, we suggest checking
out those tutorials as well.
• E-Textile Basics
• Sewing with Conductive Thread
Hardware Overview
This might be a simple shield for the Photon, but you can use it in many
different types of projects! Here is a list of hardware features for this shield.
Page 2 of 5
Female Headers for the Photon
Double check that you put the Photon in the female headers the correct
way!
No soldering required! The shield comes with two SMD headers already
soldered on, which makes easy to place the Photon on top and start a new
project. There is a white Photon silkscreen outline to help show what
direction the Photon needs to be placed.
Large Sewable Pins
There is a large pad for each one of the Photon’s pins.
The larger pins makes it possible to use different types of conductive
materials to connect sensors, LEDs, and other components to the Photon.
Conductive paint, conductive thread, and copper tape are just few different
conductive materials you can use with the large pins. When prototyping, the
large pads makes it easy to use alligator clips.
Alligator clips are great to make sure connections and code examples are
Page 3 of 5
correct before sewing components into a garment.
Normal Sized Pins
There are normal sized pins for soldering hook-up wire to the shield. Which,
is great for projects needing tons of LEDs or a solid connection.
Hardware Hookup (Conductive Thread,
Paint, and Tape)
There are different types conductive materials that can be used with the
shield. Depending on the project, some materials are better then others.
Here are the most common conductive materials to hook-up external
components to the shield and the Photon.
Conductive Thread
Want to make an IoT wearable fitness project and be able to sew an
accelerometer into your clothes? Sewing with conductive thread is a great
way to add sensors into a wearables or other e-textiles projects. It provides
more flexibility then standard hook-up wire.
Tip: Loop around a large pin hole and component three or more times, with
conductive thread, to get a solid connection.
The Photon can also work with 3.3V LilyPad products like the LilyPad
Temperature Sensor, LilyPad Accelerometer, and LilyPad Vibe Board.
Conductive Paint
Thinking of doing an interactive art painting or wall? Conductive paint opens
doors for traditional artists and tinkers to combine art and electronics
together. The conductive paint can go under or over the large pads on the
shield.
Page 4 of 5
Great for art installations!
Copper Tape
Copper tape is great for paper crafts or other e-crafts. Copper tape has an
adhesive backing, which isn’t as conductive as the nonadhesive side. We
recommend to place the copper tape under the large pads on the shield.
Use the copper tape with the large pins on the shield.
Resources & Going Further
Now that you know a little bit more about the Photon Wearables Shield, it is
time to start your project! These links may be useful in your journey:
• SparkFun Photon Wearables Shield Repo – this is where to go for
the hardware files and documentation.
• Particle Documentation Pages – go here to set up and configure your
Photon (or other Particle devices).
• Particle Community Forum – anything that you couldn’t find in the
docs should be easily found in the community forum. If you are
having trouble, search this forum first, as many of the answers are
there already.
Check out these related wearables tutorials:
Page 5 of 5
LDK Experiment 1: Lighting
Up a Basic Circuit
Insulation Techniques for
e-Textiles
The first experiment in the LilyPad
Design Kit series. In this exercise,
you will learn how a basic e-textiles
circuit works, and light up a sewable
LED using a coin cell battery holder
and conductive thread.
Learn a few different ways to protect
your conductive thread and LilyPad
components in your next wearables
project.
Bare Conductive Musical
Painting
Origami Paper Circuits
Learn how to make a musical
painting using the Bare Conductive
Touch Board and Conductive Paint.
A quick tutorial to get you started in
the world of light up origami flowers.
The Wearables Shield pairs very well with any of our other Photon Shields;
check out our hookup guides for those shields:
Photon Battery Shield
Hookup Guide
Photon OLED Shield Hookup
Guide
The Photon Battery Shield has
everything your Photon needs to run
off, charge, and monitor a LiPo
battery. Read through this hookup
guide to get started using it.
The Photon OLED Shield has
everything you need to add a small
yet crisp OLED screen to your
Photon projects. This hookup guide
will show you how to get started.
Photon IMU Shield Hookup
Guide
Learn how to use the SparkFun
Photon IMU Shield for your Photon
device which houses an on-board
LSM9DS1 system-in-a-chip that
houses a 3-axis accelerometer,
3-axis gyroscope, and 3-axis
magnetometer.
https://learn.sparkfun.com/tutorials/photon-wearable-shield-hookup-guide?_ga=1.235625... 10/22/2015
很抱歉,暂时无法提供与“DEV-13328”相匹配的价格&库存,您可以联系我们找货
免费人工找货