MOD-IO2  

MOD-IO2 - Open Source Hardware Board
MOD-IO2 - Open Source Hardware Board MOD-IO2 - Open Source Hardware Board MOD-IO2 - Open Source Hardware Board
Input output expandable board with UEXT
Price5.95 EUR
10 - 49 pcs5.36 EUR
50 - 10000 pcs4.76 EUR
In Stock

MOD-IO2 is a stackable development board which adds RELAYs and GPIOs to any of our development boards with UEXT. If you work with any of our development boards with a UEXT connector and you need more GPIOs and/or RELAY outputs, you can add these by connecting MOD-IO2 to your development board. This board gives you an easy way to interface up to 2 relays and 7 GPIOs. MOD-IO2 is stackable and addressable, what does this mean? It means that these boards can stack together so you can add as many inputs and outputs as you want! E.g. 2-4-6-8 etc.! MOD-IO2 has a CH32V003 microcontroller and the firmware is available for modification.

Product change notice: starting hardware revision C the main chip was changed to CH32V003; the firmware and usage is almost identical and firmware resources and Arudino library and examples had been updated.

FEATURES

  • CH32V003 RISC-V microcontroller pre-loaded open-source firmware for easier interfacing
  • Board uses I2C, allows I2C address change
  • Stackable
  • UEXT male and female connectors
  • 9-pin terminal screw connector for 7 GPIOs, 3.3V and GND
  • Firmware supports: 7 x GPIO, 2 x RELAY, 3 x ANALOG IN, 2 x PWM (GPIO, ANALOG IN, PWM multiplexed)
  • 2 relay outputs with 15A/250VAC contacts with screw terminals
  • RELAY output status LEDs
  • PWR jack for 12V DC
  • Four mounting holes - 3.3mm ~ (0.13)"
  • FR-4, 1.5mm ~ (0.062)", red soldermask, white silkscreen component print
  • Dimensions: (61 x 52)mm ~ (2.40 x 2.05)"

SOFTWARE

FAQ

  • I found a very nice example of MOD-IO2 connected to another board in the internet. It doesn't work despite that I use the same setup as the author. What might be different?
  • There are number of firmware revisions that had been released for MOD-IO2. You should ensure the example you have found used the same firmware revision of MOD-IO2 as the one you have on the module at the moment. Each major firmware revision might use a different board address (for firmware revisions 3, 3.1, 3.02, 4.3, 5 it is the same - 0x21) AND DIFFERENT SET OF COMMANDS. Each firmware has a README file inside the source archive that is available for download. Refer to that README or the user's manual for more information about the firmware.