Looking at the nRF8001 DK User Manual: http://imgur.com/a/NyY0L
It is unclear how pins 2-10 are organized.
Looking at the nRF8001 DK User Manual: http://imgur.com/a/NyY0L
It is unclear how pins 2-10 are organized.
Hi,
The pins are organized as shown in the nRF8001-DK HW files (pin 1 is marked on the board):
Best regards,
Jørgen
The nRF8001 runs on 1.9 to 3.6 V, so 3.3 V should be fine.
For Arduino, you can also use the Arduino shield adapter (PCA64105):
The PCA64105 adapter shield for Arduino is designed to plug onto an Arduino or ChipKIT board (UNO32, UNO, Mega2560, Leonardo or Due), or similar. The module contains headers for the Arduino interface and a level translator circuit for the communication between a 5 V platform such as Arduino and the nRF8001 running at 3.3 V.
The nRF8001 runs on 1.9 to 3.6 V, so 3.3 V should be fine.
For Arduino, you can also use the Arduino shield adapter (PCA64105):
The PCA64105 adapter shield for Arduino is designed to plug onto an Arduino or ChipKIT board (UNO32, UNO, Mega2560, Leonardo or Due), or similar. The module contains headers for the Arduino interface and a level translator circuit for the communication between a 5 V platform such as Arduino and the nRF8001 running at 3.3 V.