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You're reading from  Robotics at Home with Raspberry Pi Pico

Product typeBook
Published inMar 2023
Reading LevelBeginner
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781803246079
Edition1st Edition
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Author (1)
Danny Staple
Danny Staple
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Danny Staple

Danny Staple builds robots and gadgets as a hobbyist, makes videos about his work with robots, and attends community events such as PiWars and Arduino Day. He has been a professional Python programmer, later moving into DevOps, since 2009, and a software engineer since 2000. He has worked with embedded systems, including embedded Linux systems, throughout the majority of his career. He has been a mentor at a local CoderDojo, where he taught how to code with Python. He has run Lego Robotics clubs with Mindstorms. He has also developed Bounce!, a visual programming language targeted at teaching code using the NodeMCU IoT platform. The robots he has built with his children include TankBot, SkittleBot (now the Pi Wars robot), ArmBot, and SpiderBot.
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Wiring a Raspberry Pi Pico robot

In this section, we will look at connecting Raspberry Pi Pico to the motors via the motor controller we chose in Chapter 1, Planning a Robot with Raspberry Pi Pico. We will add the power circuitry and recommend a few techniques for robot wiring. Although the breadboard can adhere to the chassis, I tend to leave off using adhesive until it’s necessary – it is easier to wire and make changes sometimes with the breadboard out of the robot.

Wiring Pico and the motor controller into the breadboard

The motor controller that we suggested in the planning phase was the TB6612-FNG. I have used a SparkFun board. The following table shows the pins for this module:

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Robotics at Home with Raspberry Pi Pico
Published in: Mar 2023Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781803246079

Author (1)

author image
Danny Staple

Danny Staple builds robots and gadgets as a hobbyist, makes videos about his work with robots, and attends community events such as PiWars and Arduino Day. He has been a professional Python programmer, later moving into DevOps, since 2009, and a software engineer since 2000. He has worked with embedded systems, including embedded Linux systems, throughout the majority of his career. He has been a mentor at a local CoderDojo, where he taught how to code with Python. He has run Lego Robotics clubs with Mindstorms. He has also developed Bounce!, a visual programming language targeted at teaching code using the NodeMCU IoT platform. The robots he has built with his children include TankBot, SkittleBot (now the Pi Wars robot), ArmBot, and SpiderBot.
Read more about Danny Staple

Pin name

Type

Function

GND

Power

Ground – power connection back to batteries.