Well..... 2 years later (grin)

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Wow! It's been 2 years since I've posted to my blog and the last ~24 months have certainly been eventful (both good and bad)!

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Here i was posting about the new Raspberry Pico and for the last month or so I've been playing with it's new sibling, the Pico W. Unbelievable that they can pack all of that technology into a small package for $7.95CDN!

One of my hobbies is container gardening and I usually have the energy to plant the garden in the spring, but then my focus wanders and I'm intermittent on the daily watering part....grin. So the plan was to use a Raspberry Pi Zero W to pump the water I've captured in my rain barrels to the plants in the container garden, and to power it all with solar!

Well my 60Watt Solar panel could keep the pi zero w going from June to September, but as the days are getting shorter, I switched to 2 x 80W panels

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Connected to my AGM Battery with the Solar Charge Controller mounted on top. Note the high quality waterproof container (plastic bag) that it is housed in (grin)! I'm planning on making a proper container and large stand for my 7 containers etc, but that is a next Spring project. The AGM (Gel Cell) battery is a 12V, 10.3AH which was recovered from an annual emergency lighting upgrade I did. The battery capacity wasn't enough to pass the lighting test, but it will work well for my garden experiments!

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And a recycled container that used to hold wood screws is the new home for my power supply and pico w

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I use a inexpensive switch mode power supply to step the ~13.8VDC from the battery down to the 5.1VDC originally for the Zero W and now the Pico W. I don't need the 250mA idle draw of the Zero W and am hoping that the ~20mA draw of the Pico will allow the solar panels to keep the battery charged through the winter...?

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I take the voltage coming into the switch mode power supply and feed that to a 100k ohm, 10 turn (for ease of adjustment) potentiometer so that I can step the 11 - 15VDC that may be supplied down to the 3.3VDC max that the pico will measure on the ADC (Analogue to Digital Converter). The small green wires are the feed from the potentiometer to the analogue input of the pico. I've also soldered in a 250mA pico fuse inline just in case something goes wrong. All of that is hidden inside the bright orange duct tape that I've wrapped the power supply in so that the pico board cannot accidentally come in contact with the power supply board.

In another post I'll show the schematic and share the MicroPython code that I used to measure the voltage and then send it wirelessly to my mqtt broker so that I can display it via a Node Red gauge as well as graph the changes over the past 24 hours.

Thanks for viewing!
Robin

Posted with STEMGeeks



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9 comments
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Glad to see you posting again. Off to Jamaica very early Tuesday morning. Company hosting a conference for all the franchisee's. I get to run the presentation computer and help with IT issues.

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Nice! Hopefully not too many presentations or IT issues and lots of time to explore and enjoy Jamaica! We've been busy at SAIT to rebuild the makerspace student club and with a new group comes lots of questions on Raspberry Pi , IOT, Soldering, prototyping, etc. I'm hoping that I can document some of those steps and share the links with the students. I'm taking a Pico in with a Servo to do a demo for one of them tomorrow to introduce the process for a project he's working on.

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Welcome back @robingreig. This is a very nice project... I also recently used raspberry pico as a microcontroller for an IoT Health Monitoring System which I would be uploading soon.

Glad to know you sir... And I believe they are lots I would learn from your posts.

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Welcome back! And interesting thing I am always thinking about doing that...power is getting to expensive!
!1UP

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Thanks @gwajnberg! Yes power is getting expensive and our options are broadening.....once we learn how to use the tech that is becoming available to us (grin)!

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