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Development board Raspberry Pi RP2040 133 MHz ARM Cortex M0+
Development board Raspberry Pi RP2040 133 MHz ARM Cortex M0+
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Development board Raspberry Pi RP2040 133 MHz ARM Cortex M0+
Leave your address - as soon as the price of the product goes down, you'll know about it right away
Development board Raspberry Pi RP2040 133 MHz ARM Cortex M0+
Development board Raspberry Pi RP2040 133 MHz ARM Cortex M0+
The Raspberry Pi RP2040 development board features a 133 MHz ARM Cortex M0+ dual-core processor and 264 KB of on-chip SRAM, providing a compact and efficient platform for embedded systems and IoT projects. The board includes 2 MB of flash memory, a broad set of digital interfaces and peripheral support, and a small form factor of 51 x 21 mm that fits into constrained designs. Low power consumption combined with straightforward programming options makes this board suitable for both prototyping and production microcontroller applications.
The RP2040 processor runs at 133 MHz and offers dual-core performance with a simple, energy-efficient Cortex M0+ architecture. Built-in 264 KB SRAM and 2 MB flash memory provide sufficient on-chip resources for firmware and data buffering. The compact 51 x 21 mm board supports a wide range of peripheral interfaces and standard I/O, enabling flexible hardware integration. Compatibility with common development tools and programming languages simplifies development and shortens time to deployment.
Developers connect the board to a host computer via USB for power, programming and serial communication, then load firmware built with supported toolchains or SDKs. Use the exposed digital I/O and communication interfaces to attach sensors, actuators, displays or other peripherals. Configure clocks, interrupts and peripheral drivers as required by the application, and store application code in the onboard flash memory. Test functionality in a development environment before deploying to standalone operation.
For stable operation, ensure adequate power supply and decoupling when connecting multiple peripherals. Use a regulated 3.3 V power source and observe input/output voltage limits. For battery-powered projects, enable low-power modes in firmware and minimize peripheral activity to extend runtime. Follow best practices for PCB layout and grounding when integrating the board into custom hardware.
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