Getting Started With Eleven: Welcome To Your Freetronics Eleven!
Getting Started With Eleven: Welcome To Your Freetronics Eleven!
www.freetronics.com/eleven
2. Once the Arduino IDE is installed, we're ready to do the initial board and port setup. You won't need to do this
again unless the serial port number changes such as when using a different USB port on your computer.
3. In the Arduino IDE, select Tools > Board > Arduino Uno.
4. Before connecting your Eleven to the USB port, have a look at the list of ports in Tools > Serial Port. That's
where your Eleven serial port is going to appear when you plug it in.
5. Connect your Eleven to the computer USB port. We supply an appropriate USB cable with the Eleven. After a
short while if you look at Tools > Serial Port again you'll see a new port appear: that's the Eleven ready to be
used. Select that port now with Tools > Serial Port so there is a tick mark next to it.
6. You're ready to go. The Arduino IDE now knows about your board and has a connection to it. Our Eleven
boards ship with the "Blink" sketch preloaded so you should immediately see the blue power LED illuminate, and
the red D13 LED will begin flashing on and off at 1 second intervals.
Online Resources
There's a wealth of information, sketches and libraries out on the Internet for all things Arduino related. If there's a useful
function, IC or shield there is likely to be some example code or a library to support it. And it's being added to almost
daily as people like yourself create new solutions and share their projects and code to suit.
About Freetronics
Freetronics is an Australian company created by Jonathan Oxer and Marc Alexander to provide cheap and easy access to
hardware, parts, and products related to Arduino projects and the book Practical Arduino. Learn more at
www.freetronics.com. Follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/freetronics.
Your Eleven
It provides a balanced
combination of general-purpose
digital I/O pins, analog inputs,
pulse-width modulated (PWM)
outputs and communications
support to allow it to directly
control, read and communicate
with sensors, drive servos and
other external devices.
Ethernet, WiFi, ZigBee, and
hundreds of other expansion
shields and devices are also
available to operate with it.
All I/O pins and power rails are brought out to convenient headers, allowing you to either connect individual pins to a
breadboard using standard jumper wires or to plug in "shield" daughter-boards for versatile expansion. General-purpose
prototyping shields are also available which provide extensive space for you to create your own add-on circuits.
Microcontroller
MCU Type Atmel ATmega328P
Operating Voltage 5V
MCU Clock Speed 16 MHz
Eleven
Input Voltage 7-12V DC recommended
6-20V DC maximum
Digital I/O pins 14 (6 provide PWM output)
Analog Input Pins 6 (analog input pins also support digital I/O,
giving 20 digital I/O total if required)
Analog Resolution 10 bits, 0-1023 at 5V AREF is approx 0.00488V; 4.88mV per step
Current Per I/O Pin 40 mA maximum
Total Current For All I/O Pins 200mA maximum
Current For 3.3V Output 50mA maximum
Memory
Flash Memory 32 KB Flash Memory, of which less than 1 KB is used by bootloader
SRAM, EEPROM 2 KB SRAM, 1 KB EEPROM
Communications
Serial 1 x hardware USART, SPI (Serial Peripheral Interface), I2C
Other Integrated USB programming and communication port. Many other one-wire,
multi-wire, LCD and expansion devices supported by free code and libraries
Arduino Books