The Riffle is a collection of designs that take an open source approach to water monitoring, with...
Public Lab is an open community which collaboratively develops accessible, open source, Do-It-Yourself technologies for investigating local environmental health and justice issues.
99 | donblair |
September 14, 2016 23:33
| over 7 years ago
Remote Independent Friendly Field-Logger Electronics (Also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riffle for description of the stream bed feature "riffle") The RiffleThe RIffle_328 is an Atmel328-based variant of the original ARM-based Riffle water monitor, which was designed by Ben Gamari and Laura Dietz. The Riffle_328 is designed to be programmed just like an Arduino UNO in the Arduino IDE, and is compatible with most Arduino UNO software libraries. Hardware designs for the Riffle_328 are released under the CERN Open Hardware License v1.2. Public Lab's Open Water Initiative has supported development of the Riffle_328, as well as several water monitoring sensor prototypes. 2016 Riffle_328 Status. A small order of 30 boards arrived late April 2016, and were sent to Public Lab community members as a ways of testing current hardware features and direct further development. Hardware and Software Development on Github
Enclosure and deploymentThe width and height of the Riffle-ito device allows the device to fit through the mouth of a standard commercially produced plastic water bottle (20 mm). By inserting the Riffle-ito into such a bottle, along with a few AA batteries, and connecting a thermistor and other sensors that poke out through the water bottle cap, a very accessible water quality sensor may be constructed. |
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98 | donblair |
September 14, 2016 23:32
| over 7 years ago
Remote Independent Friendly Field-Logger Electronics (Also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riffle for description of the stream bed feature "riffle") The RiffleThe RIffle_328 is an Atmel328-based variant of the original ARM-based Riffle water monitor, which was designed by Ben Gamari and Laura Dietz. The Riffle_328 is designed to be programmed just like an Arduino UNO in the Arduino IDE, and is compatible with most Arduino UNO software libraries. Hardware designs for the Riffle_328 are released under the CERN Open Hardware License v1.2. Public Lab's Open Water Initiative has supported development of the Riffle_328, as well as several water monitoring sensor prototypes. 2016 Riffle_328 Status
Hardware and Software Development on Github
Enclosure and deploymentThe width and height of the Riffle-ito device allows the device to fit through the mouth of a standard commercially produced plastic water bottle (20 mm). By inserting the Riffle-ito into such a bottle, along with a few AA batteries, and connecting a thermistor and other sensors that poke out through the water bottle cap, a very accessible water quality sensor may be constructed. |
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97 | donblair |
September 10, 2016 03:13
| over 7 years ago
Remote Independent Friendly Field-Logger Electronics (Also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riffle for description of the stream bed feature "riffle") The RiffleThe RIffle_328 is an Atmel328-based variant of the original ARM-based Riffle datalogger, which was designed by Ben Gamari and Laura Dietz. The Riffle_328 is designed to be programmed just like an Arduino UNO in the Arduino IDE, and is compatible with most Arduino UNO software libraries. Hardware designs for the Riffle_328 are released under the CERN Open Hardware License v1.2. Public Lab's Open Water Initiative has supported development of the Riffle_328, as well as several water monitoring sensor prototypes. 2016 Riffle_328 Status
Hardware and Software Development on Github
Background and Goals
There have been several iterations of the hardware, including a version based on an ARM chip. Currently, development is focused on an Arduino-compatible board that is programmable through the Arduino IDE. The github repository for the hardware design files (in Eagle) are here: https://github.com/openwaterproject/riffle The board currently based on the Atmel328p, and is intended to be compatible with the accessibile and ubiquitous Wiring platform (and, by extension, the Arduino IDE). The width and height of the Riffle-ito device allows the device to fit through the mouth of a standard commercially produced plastic water bottle (20 mm). By inserting the Riffle-ito into such a bottle, along with a few AA batteries, and connecting a thermistor and other sensors that poke out through the water bottle cap, a very accessible water quality sensor may be constructed. We're also working with the Open Pipe Kit Project in order to find new ways of getting 'live' data from the field online. Can I do Riffle Style projects with other hardware?Riffle-style projects can be done with any Arduino-compatible data logger with some software modifications to account for differences in pinout, storage, and real-time-clock. References
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96 | donblair |
September 10, 2016 02:06
| over 7 years ago
Remote Independent Friendly Field-Logger Electronics (Also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riffle for description of the stream bed feature "riffle") The RiffleThe RIffle_328 is an Atmel328-based ariant of the ARM-based Riffle datalogger concept, originally conceived by Mark Green, Ben Gamari, and Laura Dietz. The Riffle_328 is designed to be programmed just like an Arduino UNO in the Arduino IDE, and should be compatible with most Arduino UNO software libraries. Hardware designs for the Riffle_328 are released under the CERN Open Hardware License v1.2. Public Lab's Open Water Initiative has supported development of the Riffle_328, as well as several water monitoring sensor prototypes. 2016 Riffle_328 Status
Hardware and Software Development on Github
Background and Goals
There have been several iterations of the hardware, including a version based on an ARM chip. Currently, development is focused on an Arduino-compatible board that is programmable through the Arduino IDE. The github repository for the hardware design files (in Eagle) are here: https://github.com/openwaterproject/riffle The board currently based on the Atmel328p, and is intended to be compatible with the accessibile and ubiquitous Wiring platform (and, by extension, the Arduino IDE). The width and height of the Riffle-ito device allows the device to fit through the mouth of a standard commercially produced plastic water bottle (20 mm). By inserting the Riffle-ito into such a bottle, along with a few AA batteries, and connecting a thermistor and other sensors that poke out through the water bottle cap, a very accessible water quality sensor may be constructed. We're also working with the Open Pipe Kit Project in order to find new ways of getting 'live' data from the field online. Can I do Riffle Style projects with other hardware?Riffle-style projects can be done with any Arduino-compatible data logger with some software modifications to account for differences in pinout, storage, and real-time-clock. References
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95 | donblair |
September 10, 2016 01:50
| over 7 years ago
Remote Independent Friendly Field-Logger Electronics (Also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riffle for description of the stream bed feature "riffle") The RiffleThe RIffle_328 is an Atmel328-based ariant of the ARM-based Riffle datalogger concept, originally conceived by Mark Green, Ben Gamari, and Laura Dietz. The Riffle_328 is designed to be programmed just like an Arduino UNO in the Arduino IDE, and should be compatible with most Arduino UNO software libraries. Hardware designs for the Riffle_328 are released under the CERN Open Hardware License v1.2. Public Lab's Open Water Initiative has supported development of the Riffle_328, as well as several water monitoring sensor prototypes. 2016 Riffle_328 Status
Hardware and Software Development on Github
Background and Goals
There have been several iterations of the hardware, including a version based on an ARM chip. Currently, development is focused on an Arduino-compatible board that is programmable through the Arduino IDE. The github repository for the hardware design files (in Eagle) are here: https://github.com/openwaterproject/riffle The board currently based on the Atmel328p, and is intended to be compatible with the accessibile and ubiquitous Wiring platform (and, by extension, the Arduino IDE). The width and height of the Riffle-ito device allows the device to fit through the mouth of a standard commercially produced plastic water bottle (20 mm). By inserting the Riffle-ito into such a bottle, along with a few AA batteries, and connecting a thermistor and other sensors that poke out through the water bottle cap, a very accessible water quality sensor may be constructed. We're also working with the Open Pipe Kit Project in order to find new ways of getting 'live' data from the field online. Can I do Riffle Style projects with other hardware?Riffle-style projects can be done with any Arduino-compatible data logger with some software modifications to account for differences in pinout, storage, and real-time-clock. References
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94 | donblair |
September 10, 2016 01:49
| over 7 years ago
Remote Independent Friendly Field-Logger Electronics (Also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riffle for description of the stream bed feature "riffle") BackgroundThe RIffle_328 is an Atmel328-based ariant of the ARM-based Riffle datalogger concept, originally conceived by Mark Green, Ben Gamari, and Laura Dietz. The Riffle_328 is designed to be programmed just like an Arduino UNO in the Arduino IDE, and should be compatible with most Arduino UNO software libraries. Hardware designs for the Riffle_328 are released under the CERN Open Hardware License v1.2. Public Lab's Open Water Initiative has supported development of the Riffle_328, as well as several water monitoring sensor prototypes. 2016 Riffle_328 Status
Hardware and Software Development on Github
Background and Goals
There have been several iterations of the hardware, including a version based on an ARM chip. Currently, development is focused on an Arduino-compatible board that is programmable through the Arduino IDE. The github repository for the hardware design files (in Eagle) are here: https://github.com/openwaterproject/riffle The board currently based on the Atmel328p, and is intended to be compatible with the accessibile and ubiquitous Wiring platform (and, by extension, the Arduino IDE). The width and height of the Riffle-ito device allows the device to fit through the mouth of a standard commercially produced plastic water bottle (20 mm). By inserting the Riffle-ito into such a bottle, along with a few AA batteries, and connecting a thermistor and other sensors that poke out through the water bottle cap, a very accessible water quality sensor may be constructed. We're also working with the Open Pipe Kit Project in order to find new ways of getting 'live' data from the field online. Can I do Riffle Style projects with other hardware?Riffle-style projects can be done with any Arduino-compatible data logger with some software modifications to account for differences in pinout, storage, and real-time-clock. References
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93 | donblair |
September 10, 2016 01:49
| over 7 years ago
Remote Independent Friendly Field-Logger Electronics (Also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riffle for description of the stream bed feature "riffle") Background The RIffle_328 is an Atmel328-based ariant of the ARM-based Riffle datalogger concept, originally conceived by Mark Green, Ben Gamari, and Laura Dietz. The Riffle_328 is designed to be programmed just like an Arduino UNO in the Arduino IDE, and should be compatible with most Arduino UNO software libraries. Hardware designs for the Riffle_328 are released under the CERN Open Hardware License v1.2. Public Lab's Open Water Initiative has supported development of the Riffle_328, as well as several water monitoring sensor prototypes. 2016 Riffle_328 Status
Hardware and Software Development on Github
Background and Goals
There have been several iterations of the hardware, including a version based on an ARM chip. Currently, development is focused on an Arduino-compatible board that is programmable through the Arduino IDE. The github repository for the hardware design files (in Eagle) are here: https://github.com/openwaterproject/riffle The board currently based on the Atmel328p, and is intended to be compatible with the accessibile and ubiquitous Wiring platform (and, by extension, the Arduino IDE). The width and height of the Riffle-ito device allows the device to fit through the mouth of a standard commercially produced plastic water bottle (20 mm). By inserting the Riffle-ito into such a bottle, along with a few AA batteries, and connecting a thermistor and other sensors that poke out through the water bottle cap, a very accessible water quality sensor may be constructed. We're also working with the Open Pipe Kit Project in order to find new ways of getting 'live' data from the field online. Can I do Riffle Style projects with other hardware?Riffle-style projects can be done with any Arduino-compatible data logger with some software modifications to account for differences in pinout, storage, and real-time-clock. References
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92 | donblair |
September 10, 2016 01:48
| over 7 years ago
Remote Independent Friendly Field-Logger Electronics (Also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riffle for description of the stream bed feature "riffle") The RIffle_328 is an Atmel328-based ariant of the ARM-based Riffle datalogger concept, originally conceived by Mark Green, Ben Gamari, and Laura Dietz. The Riffle_328 is designed to be programmed just like an Arduino UNO in the Arduino IDE, and should be compatible with most Arduino UNO software libraries. Hardware designs for the Riffle_328 are released under the CERN Open Hardware License v1.2. Public Lab's Open Water Initiative has supported development of the Riffle_328, as well as several water monitoring sensor prototypes. 2016 Riffle_328 Status
Hardware and Software Development on Github
Background and Goals
There have been several iterations of the hardware, including a version based on an ARM chip. Currently, development is focused on an Arduino-compatible board that is programmable through the Arduino IDE. The github repository for the hardware design files (in Eagle) are here: https://github.com/openwaterproject/riffle The board currently based on the Atmel328p, and is intended to be compatible with the accessibile and ubiquitous Wiring platform (and, by extension, the Arduino IDE). The width and height of the Riffle-ito device allows the device to fit through the mouth of a standard commercially produced plastic water bottle (20 mm). By inserting the Riffle-ito into such a bottle, along with a few AA batteries, and connecting a thermistor and other sensors that poke out through the water bottle cap, a very accessible water quality sensor may be constructed. We're also working with the Open Pipe Kit Project in order to find new ways of getting 'live' data from the field online. Can I do Riffle Style projects with other hardware?Riffle-style projects can be done with any Arduino-compatible data logger with some software modifications to account for differences in pinout, storage, and real-time-clock. References
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91 | donblair |
September 10, 2016 01:47
| over 7 years ago
Remote Independent Friendly Field-Logger Electronics (Also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riffle for description of the stream bed feature "riffle") The RIffle_328 is an Atmel328-based ariant of the ARM-based Riffle datalogger concept, originally conceived by Mark Green, Ben Gamari, and Laura Dietz. The Riffle_328 is designed to be programmed just like an Arduino UNO in the Arduino IDE, and should be compatible with most Arduino UNO software libraries. Hardware designs for the Riffle_328 are released under the CERN Open Hardware License v1.2. Public Lab's Open Water Initiative has supported development of the Riffle_328, as well as several water monitoring sensor prototypes. 2016 status
Hardware and Software on Github
Background and Goals
There have been several iterations of the hardware, including a version based on an ARM chip. Currently, development is focused on an Arduino-compatible board that is programmable through the Arduino IDE. The github repository for the hardware design files (in Eagle) are here: https://github.com/openwaterproject/riffle The board currently based on the Atmel328p, and is intended to be compatible with the accessibile and ubiquitous Wiring platform (and, by extension, the Arduino IDE). The width and height of the Riffle-ito device allows the device to fit through the mouth of a standard commercially produced plastic water bottle (20 mm). By inserting the Riffle-ito into such a bottle, along with a few AA batteries, and connecting a thermistor and other sensors that poke out through the water bottle cap, a very accessible water quality sensor may be constructed. We're also working with the Open Pipe Kit Project in order to find new ways of getting 'live' data from the field online. Can I do Riffle Style projects with other hardware?Riffle-style projects can be done with any Arduino-compatible data logger with some software modifications to account for differences in pinout, storage, and real-time-clock. References
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90 | donblair |
September 10, 2016 01:46
| over 7 years ago
Remote Independent Friendly Field-Logger Electronics (Also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riffle for description of the stream bed feature "riffle") The RIffle_328 is an Atmel 328 variant of the ARM-based Riffle datalogger concept, originally conceived by Mark Green, Ben Gamari, and Laura Dietz. Public Lab's Open Water Initiative has supported development of the Riffle_328, as well as several water monitoring sensor prototypes. 2016 status
Hardware and Software on Github
Background and Goals
There have been several iterations of the hardware, including a version based on an ARM chip. Currently, development is focused on an Arduino-compatible board that is programmable through the Arduino IDE. The github repository for the hardware design files (in Eagle) are here: https://github.com/openwaterproject/riffle The board currently based on the Atmel328p, and is intended to be compatible with the accessibile and ubiquitous Wiring platform (and, by extension, the Arduino IDE). The width and height of the Riffle-ito device allows the device to fit through the mouth of a standard commercially produced plastic water bottle (20 mm). By inserting the Riffle-ito into such a bottle, along with a few AA batteries, and connecting a thermistor and other sensors that poke out through the water bottle cap, a very accessible water quality sensor may be constructed. We're also working with the Open Pipe Kit Project in order to find new ways of getting 'live' data from the field online. Can I do Riffle Style projects with other hardware?Riffle-style projects can be done with any Arduino-compatible data logger with some software modifications to account for differences in pinout, storage, and real-time-clock. References
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89 | donblair |
September 10, 2016 01:41
| over 7 years ago
2016 status
Hardware and Software on Github
Background and Goals
There have been several iterations of the hardware, including a version based on an ARM chip. Currently, development is focused on an Arduino-compatible board that is programmable through the Arduino IDE. The github repository for the hardware design files (in Eagle) are here: https://github.com/openwaterproject/riffle The board currently based on the Atmel328p, and is intended to be compatible with the accessibile and ubiquitous Wiring platform (and, by extension, the Arduino IDE). The width and height of the Riffle-ito device allows the device to fit through the mouth of a standard commercially produced plastic water bottle (20 mm). By inserting the Riffle-ito into such a bottle, along with a few AA batteries, and connecting a thermistor and other sensors that poke out through the water bottle cap, a very accessible water quality sensor may be constructed. We're also working with the Open Pipe Kit Project in order to find new ways of getting 'live' data from the field online. Can I do Riffle Style projects with other hardware?Riffle-style projects can be done with any Arduino-compatible data logger with some software modifications to account for differences in pinout, storage, and real-time-clock. References
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88 | donblair |
September 10, 2016 01:40
| over 7 years ago
2016 status
Hardware and Software on Github
Background and Goals
There have been several iterations of the hardware, including a version based on an ARM chip. Currently, development is focused on an Arduino-compatible board that is programmable through the Arduino IDE. The github repository for the hardware design files (in Eagle) are here: https://github.com/openwaterproject/riffle The board currently based on the Atmel328p, and is intended to be compatible with the accessibile and ubiquitous Wiring platform (and, by extension, the Arduino IDE). The width and height of the Riffle-ito device allows the device to fit through the mouth of a standard commercially produced plastic water bottle (20 mm). By inserting the Riffle-ito into such a bottle, along with a few AA batteries, and connecting a thermistor and other sensors that poke out through the water bottle cap, a very accessible water quality sensor may be constructed. We're also working with the Open Pipe Kit Project in order to find new ways of getting 'live' data from the field online. Can I do Riffle Style projects with other hardware?Riffle-style projects can be done with any Arduino-compatible data logger with some software modifications to account for differences in pinout, storage, and real-time-clock. References
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87 | donblair |
September 10, 2016 01:40
| over 7 years ago
Hardware and Software on Github
2016 status
Background and Goals
There have been several iterations of the hardware, including a version based on an ARM chip. Currently, development is focused on an Arduino-compatible board that is programmable through the Arduino IDE. The github repository for the hardware design files (in Eagle) are here: https://github.com/openwaterproject/riffle The board currently based on the Atmel328p, and is intended to be compatible with the accessibile and ubiquitous Wiring platform (and, by extension, the Arduino IDE). The width and height of the Riffle-ito device allows the device to fit through the mouth of a standard commercially produced plastic water bottle (20 mm). By inserting the Riffle-ito into such a bottle, along with a few AA batteries, and connecting a thermistor and other sensors that poke out through the water bottle cap, a very accessible water quality sensor may be constructed. We're also working with the Open Pipe Kit Project in order to find new ways of getting 'live' data from the field online. Can I do Riffle Style projects with other hardware?Riffle-style projects can be done with any Arduino-compatible data logger with some software modifications to account for differences in pinout, storage, and real-time-clock. References
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86 | donblair |
September 10, 2016 01:39
| over 7 years ago
Github
2016 status
Background and Goals
There have been several iterations of the hardware, including a version based on an ARM chip. Currently, development is focused on an Arduino-compatible board that is programmable through the Arduino IDE. The github repository for the hardware design files (in Eagle) are here: https://github.com/openwaterproject/riffle The board currently based on the Atmel328p, and is intended to be compatible with the accessibile and ubiquitous Wiring platform (and, by extension, the Arduino IDE). The width and height of the Riffle-ito device allows the device to fit through the mouth of a standard commercially produced plastic water bottle (20 mm). By inserting the Riffle-ito into such a bottle, along with a few AA batteries, and connecting a thermistor and other sensors that poke out through the water bottle cap, a very accessible water quality sensor may be constructed. We're also working with the Open Pipe Kit Project in order to find new ways of getting 'live' data from the field online. Can I do Riffle Style projects with other hardware?Riffle-style projects can be done with any Arduino-compatible data logger with some software modifications to account for differences in pinout, storage, and real-time-clock. References
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85 | donblair |
September 10, 2016 01:39
| over 7 years ago
Hardware and Software on Github
2016 status
Background and Goals
There have been several iterations of the hardware, including a version based on an ARM chip. Currently, development is focused on an Arduino-compatible board that is programmable through the Arduino IDE. The github repository for the hardware design files (in Eagle) are here: https://github.com/openwaterproject/riffle The board currently based on the Atmel328p, and is intended to be compatible with the accessibile and ubiquitous Wiring platform (and, by extension, the Arduino IDE). The width and height of the Riffle-ito device allows the device to fit through the mouth of a standard commercially produced plastic water bottle (20 mm). By inserting the Riffle-ito into such a bottle, along with a few AA batteries, and connecting a thermistor and other sensors that poke out through the water bottle cap, a very accessible water quality sensor may be constructed. We're also working with the Open Pipe Kit Project in order to find new ways of getting 'live' data from the field online. Can I do Riffle Style projects with other hardware?Riffle-style projects can be done with any Arduino-compatible data logger with some software modifications to account for differences in pinout, storage, and real-time-clock. References
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84 | donblair |
September 10, 2016 01:33
| over 7 years ago
Hardware and Software on Github
2016 status
Background and Goals
There have been several iterations of the hardware, including a version based on an ARM chip. Currently, development is focused on an Arduino-compatible board that is programmable through the Arduino IDE. The github repository for the hardware design files (in Eagle) are here: https://github.com/openwaterproject/riffle The board currently based on the Atmel328p, and is intended to be compatible with the accessibile and ubiquitous Wiring platform (and, by extension, the Arduino IDE). The width and height of the Riffle-ito device allows the device to fit through the mouth of a standard commercially produced plastic water bottle (20 mm). By inserting the Riffle-ito into such a bottle, along with a few AA batteries, and connecting a thermistor and other sensors that poke out through the water bottle cap, a very accessible water quality sensor may be constructed. We're also working with the Open Pipe Kit Project in order to find new ways of getting 'live' data from the field online. Can I do Riffle Style projects with other hardware?Riffle-style projects can be done with any Arduino-compatible data logger with some software modifications to account for differences in pinout, storage, and real-time-clock. References
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83 | donblair |
September 10, 2016 01:32
| over 7 years ago
Hardware and Software on Github
2016 status
Background and Goals
There have been several iterations of the hardware, including a version based on an ARM chip. Currently, development is focused on an Arduino-compatible board that is programmable through the Arduino IDE. The github repository for the hardware design files (in Eagle) are here: https://github.com/openwaterproject/riffle The board currently based on the Atmel328p, and is intended to be compatible with the accessibile and ubiquitous Wiring platform (and, by extension, the Arduino IDE). The width and height of the Riffle-ito device allows the device to fit through the mouth of a standard commercially produced plastic water bottle (20 mm). By inserting the Riffle-ito into such a bottle, along with a few AA batteries, and connecting a thermistor and other sensors that poke out through the water bottle cap, a very accessible water quality sensor may be constructed. We're also working with the Open Pipe Kit Project in order to find new ways of getting 'live' data from the field online. Can I do Riffle Style projects with other hardware?Riffle-style projects can be done with any Arduino-compatible data logger with some software modifications to account for differences in pinout, storage, and real-time-clock. References
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82 | donblair |
September 10, 2016 01:31
| over 7 years ago
Hardware and Software on GithubOpenwaterproject riffle_328 [riffle_328-conductivity](https://github.com/OpenWaterProject/riffle_328-conductivity] 2016 status
Background and Goals
There have been several iterations of the hardware, including a version based on an ARM chip. Currently, development is focused on an Arduino-compatible board that is programmable through the Arduino IDE. The github repository for the hardware design files (in Eagle) are here: https://github.com/openwaterproject/riffle The board currently based on the Atmel328p, and is intended to be compatible with the accessibile and ubiquitous Wiring platform (and, by extension, the Arduino IDE). The width and height of the Riffle-ito device allows the device to fit through the mouth of a standard commercially produced plastic water bottle (20 mm). By inserting the Riffle-ito into such a bottle, along with a few AA batteries, and connecting a thermistor and other sensors that poke out through the water bottle cap, a very accessible water quality sensor may be constructed. We're also working with the Open Pipe Kit Project in order to find new ways of getting 'live' data from the field online. Can I do Riffle Style projects with other hardware?Riffle-style projects can be done with any Arduino-compatible data logger with some software modifications to account for differences in pinout, storage, and real-time-clock. References
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81 | mathew |
August 02, 2016 18:55
| over 7 years ago
Most project activity is happening on Github, visit the Riffle project there: https://github.com/OpenWaterProject/riffle 2016 status
Background and Goals
There have been several iterations of the hardware, including a version based on an ARM chip. Currently, development is focused on an Arduino-compatible board that is programmable through the Arduino IDE. The github repository for the hardware design files (in Eagle) are here: https://github.com/openwaterproject/riffle The board currently based on the Atmel328p, and is intended to be compatible with the accessibile and ubiquitous Wiring platform (and, by extension, the Arduino IDE). The width and height of the Riffle-ito device allows the device to fit through the mouth of a standard commercially produced plastic water bottle (20 mm). By inserting the Riffle-ito into such a bottle, along with a few AA batteries, and connecting a thermistor and other sensors that poke out through the water bottle cap, a very accessible water quality sensor may be constructed. We're also working with the Open Pipe Kit Project in order to find new ways of getting 'live' data from the field online. Can I do Riffle Style projects with other hardware?Riffle-style projects can be done with any Arduino-compatible data logger with some software modifications to account for differences in pinout, storage, and real-time-clock. References
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80 | liz |
May 04, 2016 14:33
| almost 8 years ago
Most project activity is happening on Github, visit the Riffle project there: https://github.com/OpenWaterProject/riffle 2016 status
Background and Goals
There have been several iterations of the hardware, including a version based on an ARM chip. Currently, development is focused on an Arduino-compatible board that is programmable through the Arduino IDE. The github repository for the hardware design files (in Eagle) are here: https://github.com/openwaterproject/riffle The board currently based on the Atmel328p, and is intended to be compatible with the accessibile and ubiquitous Wiring platform (and, by extension, the Arduino IDE). The width and height of the Riffle-ito device allows the device to fit through the mouth of a standard commercially produced plastic water bottle (20 mm). By inserting the Riffle-ito into such a bottle, along with a few AA batteries, and connecting a thermistor and other sensors that poke out through the water bottle cap, a very accessible water quality sensor may be constructed. We're also working with the Open Pipe Kit Project in order to find new ways of getting 'live' data from the field online. References
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