• Home
  • Products
    • Papilio FPGA
    • Arcade MegaWing
    • RetroCade MegaWing
    • LogicStart MegaWing
    • Logic Sniffer
    • Papilio Wings
  • Store
    • Gadget Factory Store
    • India Store
    • Distributers
  • Wikis
    • Papilio Wiki
    • Arcade Wiki
    • RetroCade Wiki
    • Logic Sniffer Wiki
  • Forum
  • Showcase
  • Downloads
  • Source Code
  • Home
  • Products
    • Papilio FPGA
    • Arcade MegaWing
    • RetroCade MegaWing
    • LogicStart MegaWing
    • Logic Sniffer
    • Papilio Wings
  • Store
    • Gadget Factory Store
    • India Store
    • Distributers
  • Wikis
    • Papilio Wiki
    • Arcade Wiki
    • RetroCade Wiki
    • Logic Sniffer Wiki
  • Forum
  • Showcase
  • Downloads
  • Source Code
Previous Next

Papilio And pcDuino Together As A USB to 3.3V TTL RS232 adapter

Posted by: Jack Gassett , April 5, 2013

Here’s a great and simple project using a Papilio One and a pcDuino together for the purpose of making a USB to 3.3V TTL RS232 adapter. This is from Mike Field’s site Hamsterworks where he’s got a full project description and the code to go along with it! Mike says,
[jbox color="blue" vgradient="#fdfeff|#bae3ff"]I’ve got a pcDuino and sometimes it is nice to have access to the serial console. Although you wouldn’t want to dedicate a board to it it is perfect for occasional use. As a bonus, due to the flexibility of the FPGA’s I/O pins you can use it for multiple different I/O standards and voltages – If you change to IOSTANDARDs and maybe the Vco jumper you have also got yourself 2.5V or 1.2V CMOS to USB adapter![/jbox]

Cool project, Mike.  It just so happens that we are now selling the pcDuino to compliment our own Gadget Factory product line-up, you can check it out in all its glory here.

(via Hamsterworks)

Tags: Papilio One, Papilio Projects, pcDuino, user projects

Comments

comments

About Gadget Factory

We make Open Source Hardware that is extremely Hackable, what we call Hack|Ware. Founded in 2009 by Aspiring Inventor Jack Gassett, we are hardware suppliers and inventors with a community focused approach. Home of the Papilio FPGA board and other open source hardware designs.

Located in Denver, Colorado just minutes away from beautiful Boulder, Colorado.

Gadget Factory Learning Site

Inspired by the excellent learning sites at Adafruit and Sparkfun we made our own learning site with tutorials about FPGA's, Electronics, and Making Open Source Hardware. If you have tutorials you would like to contribute please contact us at support@gadgetfactory.net.

If you have a project or code that you would like to share please post to the Showcase website.
© Gadget Factory 2013