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pwm-gripheat Power view
Description

Imported from GitHub: atomspring/PWM-GripHeat · commit 0f645a3 · license GPL-3.0

Description

Rugged PWM control for a motorcycle grip heater

README

PWM-GripHeat

Rugged PWM control for a grip heater using an attiny85 and a beefy NMOS, supporting a dual color or RGB indicator, with careful attention paid to power usage.

KiCad 8.0 Schematics and PCB files are (as expected) under the "hardware" folder, firmware is under the "firmware" folder.

Cost for a single board was TODO: fill in total costs, total including optional mechanical components was TODO:

Hardware

The BOM (bill-of-materials) is relatively short, holding all mechanical components in here, and the PCB components here.

Assembly should take about an hour's work with the right tools. I use lead-free solder paste for all my work, with the PCB itself using ENIG for all pads. Soldering is sped up by using a hand-held hot air reflow gun, but all pads are big enough to facilitate hand soldering.

Firmware

I'm using PlatformIO on VSCodium to write the fairly simple firmware, build steps:

  1. Item 1
  2. rr
  3. te

License

This project is:

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