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Making Fiends

A project log for SIR IrDA Lot

A cheap and easy IrDA SIR adapter

ziggurat29ziggurat29 7 hours ago0 Comments

Today I set out on the fiddly affair of making a wired connection between the BluePill and the IrDA transceiver.  The transceiver requires a couple passives:  a series dropping resistor for the IR LED (so you can tune for power budget), and a couple bypass caps (to provide some impulse capability when driving the LED).

This is somewhat fraught because the modules are SMD, and typically at a fine pitch of 50 mil.  I am using some obsolete NOS parts from surplus which cost me USD $2 ea.  So I got 10.  Because I know I'm going to break some, and because I know I'm going to want some more.  (And you really want two, because otherwise who are you going to talk to?)

Anwyay, I chose to do the 'circuit sculpture' technique of wiring in free space with no PCB, just without the aesthetic.  This is a slow process, so I don't recommend it in general, but if you just want a couple and have the time and patience to spare, it can be done.

I wound up making one for breadboard, and one for wiring permanently.

The breadboard adapter is pretty easy to fabricate:

The breadboard is easy because the passives can be on the breadboard.  But this confines you to a breadboard.

The free-space-wired dedicated module is a little more tricky since you're doing 'circuit sculpture', but it can be done.

I crimped terminators on mine simply because my BluePill already had pin headers soldered on.

Final connection is trivial:

You'll possibly want two!  I had my breadboard unit in addition to this one, so I was able to open two terminals and see data exchanged in both directions between the two.

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