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Raspberry Pi Forum Simple+cheap I/O expansion with MCP23017
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Simple+cheap I/O expansion with MCP23017

morgaine
morgaine over 13 years ago

I stumbled across this simple little Pi project at SK Pang in the UK, one step up from blinking a single LED --- blinking a large row of them with patterns of your choice, aided by Microchip's MCP23017 I/O expander  --- http://www.skpang.co.uk/blog/archives/454

 

Although very simple, I think it might be worth highlighting as another step on the learning path for budding hardware engineers, particularly given that the MCP23017 costs under one pound from Farnell --- http://uk.farnell.com/microchip/mcp23017-e-sp/16bit-expander-i-o-i2c-i-f-dip28/dp/1332088 .  SK Pang are bundling that chip in a "Starter Kit for Pi" together with their Pi cover, breadboard, LEDs etc, which may be convenient if you need a breadboard or cover anyway --- http://www.skpang.co.uk/catalog/starter-kit-for-raspberry-pi-b-p-1107.html

 

See Nathan Chantrell's site --- http://nathan.chantrell.net/ --- for full details of software and hardware aspects of the project, including variations such as building on top of the well known Slice of Pi expansion board.  Direct article links ---  http://nathan.chantrell.net/20120519/raspberry-pi-and-the-mcp23017-i2c-io-expander/ , http://nathan.chantrell.net/20120524/python-tools-for-the-mcp23017-io-expander/ , http://nathan.chantrell.net/20120602/raspberry-pi-io-expander-board/ .  And finally, Nathan's article about interfacing the Pi's 3.3V I/Os with the 5V MCP23017 device is important educational reading --- http://nathan.chantrell.net/20120610/raspberry-pi-and-i2c-devices-of-different-voltage/ .

 

At the MCP23017's very low price, this project can be expanded a lot further easily, as 3 address pins allow you to directly address up to 8 of these devices on the I2C bus.  There is also a version of the chip for the SPI bus, MCP23S17 --- http://uk.farnell.com/microchip/mcp23s17-e-sp/ic-16bit-i-o-expander-spi-23s17/dp/1292238 , and you could in principle use 8 devices on each I/O bus if you have a truly demonic project.

 

The datasheet for MCP23017/MCP23S17 is available at http://www.farnell.com/datasheets/12170.pdf .

 

The Pi certainly has rather limited hardware I/O capability, but that's no deterrant for those who want more simple I/Os. image

 

Morgaine.

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  • morgaine
    morgaine over 13 years ago

    There is now an article on the RPF blog about using that SK Pang kit that comes with the MCP23017 expander -- http://www.raspberrypi.org/archives/1488  .  Gordon's project doesn't use the expander for his game though.

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  • Grumpy_Mike
    Grumpy_Mike over 13 years ago in reply to morgaine

    Just run it at 3.3v and be done with it.

    The point is that it acts as a good bridge between the 3V3 world and the 5V world.

    Sure run it at 3V3 if you want but there is a lot of 5V stuff out there in peripherial world.

    Also the 3V3 regulator is limited to 50mA where as the 5V comes straight off the Pi side of the poy fuse so given a decent power supply you should be able to get a decent current from the 5V. There are even people using the GPIO connector's 5V pin to power the whole Pi and bypass the poly fuse.

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  • Grumpy_Mike
    Grumpy_Mike over 13 years ago in reply to morgaine

    Just run it at 3.3v and be done with it.

    The point is that it acts as a good bridge between the 3V3 world and the 5V world.

    Sure run it at 3V3 if you want but there is a lot of 5V stuff out there in peripherial world.

    Also the 3V3 regulator is limited to 50mA where as the 5V comes straight off the Pi side of the poy fuse so given a decent power supply you should be able to get a decent current from the 5V. There are even people using the GPIO connector's 5V pin to power the whole Pi and bypass the poly fuse.

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