PCF8591 Quad 8-bit ADC + 8-bit DAC - STEMMA QT / Qwiic

Adafruit  |  SKU: 3739
£6.30
Tax included, shipping and discounts calculated at checkout.


DESCRIPTION

Measuring voltage and adjusting it is what electronics is all about so you won’t get far without friends like the Adafruit PCF8591 Quad 8-bit ADC + 8-bit DAC combo. Analog to Digital Converters help by measuring an analogue voltage and turning it into something a microcontroller like a Metro or Arduino can understand. If you’re using a single board computer like a Raspberry Pi, you might not have any other way to measure a voltage because even though they are well equipped for digital circuits, many boards of that type don’t have any pins that can measure analogue voltages.

The PCF8591 is not the highest quality ADC/DAC - with only 8 bits of measurement, but it works well and is fairly inexpensive so for many basic uses it will work just fine.

Adding a PCF8591 to your electronics project will give you not one, not two, but four 8-bit analogue inputs that you can use to measure voltages. If knobs are just the thing to complete your project, just add a PCF8591 and some potentiometers and you’re ready to twist, turn, twiddle and tweak to get things just right.

Along with four 8-bit ADC channels, the PCF8591 comes complete with an 8-bit Digital to Analog Converter converter as well! Not only can you measure voltages, but now you can create them just as you want them. You can even use the DAC and ADC together to create an input to a circuit and measure the results with the ADC. The possibilities abound!

On the back of each PCF8591 breakout are three jumpers that allow you to set the I2C address, allowing the use of eight PCF8591s on the same I2C bus! That’s up to a whopping 32 channels of analogue measurement and 8 channels of analogue signal generation! If you do decide to go all out with your project, you won’t break the bank because the PCF8591 breakouts are reasonably priced compared to some higher-end ADCs.

As if 4 ADCs and one DAC in a single package weren’t enough, they’ve made it even easier to use by mounting the PCF8591's chonky SO16 surface mount package onto a breakout with standard 0.1”/2.54mm headers and SparkFun Qwiic compatible STEMMA QT connectors for the I2C bus, making it simple to integrate with your project. Using the wiring diagrams and example code on the pages that follow, you’ll be able to use the Python and Arduino libraries to easily measure as many voltages as you need (as long as that number is 32 or less).

FEATURES
  • Dimensions: 25.4mm x 22.8mm x 4.6mm / 1.0" x 0.9" x 0.2"
  • Weight: 2.5g / 0.1oz
RESOURCES
PCF8591 Quad 8-bit ADC + 8-bit DAC - STEMMA QT / Qwiic - Component
Adafruit

PCF8591 Quad 8-bit ADC + 8-bit DAC - STEMMA QT / Qwiic

£6.30
DESCRIPTION

Measuring voltage and adjusting it is what electronics is all about so you won’t get far without friends like the Adafruit PCF8591 Quad 8-bit ADC + 8-bit DAC combo. Analog to Digital Converters help by measuring an analogue voltage and turning it into something a microcontroller like a Metro or Arduino can understand. If you’re using a single board computer like a Raspberry Pi, you might not have any other way to measure a voltage because even though they are well equipped for digital circuits, many boards of that type don’t have any pins that can measure analogue voltages.

The PCF8591 is not the highest quality ADC/DAC - with only 8 bits of measurement, but it works well and is fairly inexpensive so for many basic uses it will work just fine.

Adding a PCF8591 to your electronics project will give you not one, not two, but four 8-bit analogue inputs that you can use to measure voltages. If knobs are just the thing to complete your project, just add a PCF8591 and some potentiometers and you’re ready to twist, turn, twiddle and tweak to get things just right.

Along with four 8-bit ADC channels, the PCF8591 comes complete with an 8-bit Digital to Analog Converter converter as well! Not only can you measure voltages, but now you can create them just as you want them. You can even use the DAC and ADC together to create an input to a circuit and measure the results with the ADC. The possibilities abound!

On the back of each PCF8591 breakout are three jumpers that allow you to set the I2C address, allowing the use of eight PCF8591s on the same I2C bus! That’s up to a whopping 32 channels of analogue measurement and 8 channels of analogue signal generation! If you do decide to go all out with your project, you won’t break the bank because the PCF8591 breakouts are reasonably priced compared to some higher-end ADCs.

As if 4 ADCs and one DAC in a single package weren’t enough, they’ve made it even easier to use by mounting the PCF8591's chonky SO16 surface mount package onto a breakout with standard 0.1”/2.54mm headers and SparkFun Qwiic compatible STEMMA QT connectors for the I2C bus, making it simple to integrate with your project. Using the wiring diagrams and example code on the pages that follow, you’ll be able to use the Python and Arduino libraries to easily measure as many voltages as you need (as long as that number is 32 or less).

FEATURES
RESOURCES
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