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Powering Alternatives for Arduino Boards fills a gap that's been around for a while, it's very useful document. I've been researching how much power the 5V pin on an Arduino UNO R3 can supply and I've only just discovered it.
A few questions:
For VIN Pin section the table has UNO Rev3 as 7-12V range, the datasheet says 6-20V
For 3V3/5V Pin section the table has UNO Rev3 as 1A from 5V and 0.150 from 3V3. Are these numbers based on just the regulators? They look misleading as
the 3V3 is documented as "MAXIMUM current per +3.3V pin is 50mA" (not 150mA) in the pinout;
the 5V current is going to be more like 1000mA - board-use-including-3V3-regulator - current-that-cannot-be-used-due-to-over-heating - it will also be limited to 500mA (or a lower conservative value) for USB powering due to the polyfuse.
I'll mention @futureshocked in case he's interested as he's written an article in this area.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
Powering Alternatives for Arduino Boards fills a gap that's been around for a while, it's very useful document. I've been researching how much power the
5V
pin on an Arduino UNO R3 can supply and I've only just discovered it.A few questions:
3V3
is documented as "MAXIMUM current per +3.3V pin is 50mA" (not 150mA) in the pinout;5V
current is going to be more like 1000mA - board-use-including-3V3-regulator - current-that-cannot-be-used-due-to-over-heating - it will also be limited to 500mA (or a lower conservative value) for USB powering due to the polyfuse.I'll mention @futureshocked in case he's interested as he's written an article in this area.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: