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Sensors
Sensor Forum When you need many sensors at once...
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When you need many sensors at once...

screamingtiger
screamingtiger over 9 years ago

I have a project where I may need 25+ accelerometers and magnetometers.

 

I see three options for sensors:

-Direct wire, which could be possible with shift registers

-I2c, however many sensors of the same brand only ship with 1 or 2 address options and I dont want to have dozens of different brands with with different protocols

-SPI, same problem as I2c.

 

I found the I2C sensors to be cheap, is there a way to use numerous sensors with the same address within one bus?

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  • dougw
    dougw over 9 years ago +4 verified
    Linear Technology makes chips to handle this situation - up to 127 devices with the same address can be handled on one bus, but you may need one of these chips at each sensor. They cost about $2 each.…
  • shabaz
    shabaz over 9 years ago in reply to gdstew +2 suggested
    yet here you are again pushing the easily dis-proven idea that I2C is only good for short distances between boards Where did I state with the explicitness that you suggest, that it is only good for short…
  • michaelkellett
    michaelkellett over 9 years ago in reply to screamingtiger +2
    Another method you might consider (it's cheaper for the parts but has other issues) would be to use a single micro with plenty of pins (50 spare IOs needed) and bit bang as many IC2 buses as you need.…
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  • shabaz
    0 shabaz over 9 years ago

    Hi Joey,

     

    beacon_dave mentions a good approach if you really need lots of same-address devices. But, you could try to examine the device datasheet and the PCB in case it is easy to expand to more than a couple of addresses, since sometimes the PCB will have hard-wired connections whereas sometimes the ICs may be more flexible and have (say) 8 addresses.

    Another approach is to switch in/out parallel segments of the bus, by using I2C bus translators with an enable input. TI has such devices.

    Or, yet another method is to not put everything on one bus, and perhaps bit-bang out of some additional I/O pins of the microcontroller, i.e. an I2C bus master could be written in software.

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  • shabaz
    0 shabaz over 9 years ago

    Hi Joey,

     

    beacon_dave mentions a good approach if you really need lots of same-address devices. But, you could try to examine the device datasheet and the PCB in case it is easy to expand to more than a couple of addresses, since sometimes the PCB will have hard-wired connections whereas sometimes the ICs may be more flexible and have (say) 8 addresses.

    Another approach is to switch in/out parallel segments of the bus, by using I2C bus translators with an enable input. TI has such devices.

    Or, yet another method is to not put everything on one bus, and perhaps bit-bang out of some additional I/O pins of the microcontroller, i.e. an I2C bus master could be written in software.

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