03-08-2014, 16:39
Hi, uncle_bob
At first look at the picture of your board, my first thought was: But where do I have published this photo?
Is so similar to mine, even has the same type of connectors. Looks great.
No problem at all.
R8 - must be adjusted to 10K, or as close as you can. As the wind direction is done by an analog read, this pot is there just in case we need to do an inicial fine adjust (I never had to do any adjustment, after setting it to 10K)
R1 - Your green led will be fine with it.
I see you have used a yellow led instead of a blue, no problem with that, they can be any color you like. Just calculate R1 and R2 so that the current through the LED is appropriate.
Note that the leds are powered from the 9V voltage regulator.
For a yellow led, perhaps you must raise R2 to... anything from 360R to 470R will be fine. I know you understand what I'm saying.
I completely forgot to include the VirtualWire library. I will fix it immediately.
I have been using version 1.20 of the VirtualWire library, but since I read your post, I've been doing some testing with version 1.27 and it seems to work perfectly (also it saves some precious bytes). I'll continue my tests for a few more hours and if I find no errors, this version of the library will be added to the WeatherDuino Pro2 software package.
So I think you can stay with version 1.27
Does your TX (green) led blink?
PS: As soon as I can I will start study the new Radiohead library.
At first look at the picture of your board, my first thought was: But where do I have published this photo?

Is so similar to mine, even has the same type of connectors. Looks great.
Quote:I make a couple of substitutions:
I only could find a 20K pot for R8 (15K).
And a 360R for R1 (380R).
No problem at all.
R8 - must be adjusted to 10K, or as close as you can. As the wind direction is done by an analog read, this pot is there just in case we need to do an inicial fine adjust (I never had to do any adjustment, after setting it to 10K)
R1 - Your green led will be fine with it.
I see you have used a yellow led instead of a blue, no problem with that, they can be any color you like. Just calculate R1 and R2 so that the current through the LED is appropriate.
Note that the leds are powered from the 9V voltage regulator.
For a yellow led, perhaps you must raise R2 to... anything from 360R to 470R will be fine. I know you understand what I'm saying.

Quote:Edit: It's OK, I just tried the VirtualWire-1.27 version and it compiled ok. Werk, please let me know if this library isn't the right one.
I completely forgot to include the VirtualWire library. I will fix it immediately.
I have been using version 1.20 of the VirtualWire library, but since I read your post, I've been doing some testing with version 1.27 and it seems to work perfectly (also it saves some precious bytes). I'll continue my tests for a few more hours and if I find no errors, this version of the library will be added to the WeatherDuino Pro2 software package.
So I think you can stay with version 1.27
Does your TX (green) led blink?
PS: As soon as I can I will start study the new Radiohead library.



