Sometimes you just need an MP3 to play. Whether it's a theme song as you enter the room or a power song when you are working out. The SparkFun Qwiic MP3 Trigger takes care of all the necessary requirements, all you need to do is send a simple I2C command and listen to whatever is on your micro SD card. Utilizing our handy Qwiic system, no soldering is required to connect it to the rest of your system. However, we still have broken out 0.1"-spaced pins in case you prefer to use a breadboard.
When a USB-C cable is connected to the Qwiic MP3 Trigger the contents of the microSD card appears as a jump drive. Simply plug in the Qwiic MP3 Trigger and you'll be transferring MP3s, no need for drivers and no need for WAV or Vorbis conversion! Sound output is provided via a 3.5mm headphone jack or poke-home connector allowing an external speaker to be connected without soldering. Your supplied speaker is boosted by a Class-D mono amplifier capable of outputting up to 1.4W making it capable of being incredibly loud! Volume is software selectable between 32 levels while equalization can be tuned to be sure your classical hits sound different from your jazz dance routines. If you don't want to deal with any programming, there are four trigger pins. When pin 3 is pulled low the T003.mp3 file will immediately be played. This allows you to start playing sound effects with the touch of a button! By pulling multiple pins down simultaneously the four triggers can play up to ten tracks: T001 to T010. Up to 255 tracks can be loaded onto the SD card and triggered via the I2C interface.
All settings including volume, EQ, and I2C address are stored in NVM and loaded at each power up. The I2C address of the Qwiic MP3 Trigger can be modified via a solder jumper or be assigned using a software command. Multiple Qwiic MP3 Triggers can be chained together on a single bus allowing for simultaneous track mixing and triggering.
We've written an extensive Arduino library to make MP3 playing over I2C a breeze. Play tracks, change volume, play next/previous, check if track is playing, stop play, change EQ, and change I2C address are all supported.
The SparkFun Qwiic Connect System is an ecosystem of I2C sensors, actuators, shields and cables that make prototyping faster and less prone to error. All Qwiic-enabled boards use a common 1mm pitch, 4-pin JST connector. This reduces the amount of required PCB space, and polarized connections mean you can?t hook it up wrong.
Features:
Documents:
Videos
El Makey Makey es un kit de creación interactiva que convierte prácticamente cualquier objeto común en diferentes teclas táctiles con lo que se puede ...
Esta cinta de cobre permite variedad de aplicaciones, desde crear pistas para componentes electrónicos a fabricar antenas. Ancho 5mm. Longitud: 15m.50% DESCUENTO SOLO hasta fin de ...
El material conductivo velostat (o también conocido como Linqstat) es sensible a la presión, al doblarlo o arrugarlo disminuye su resistencia con lo que permite hacer sensores flexibles. Dimensiones 28 x ...
Este kit incluye: Micro:bit V2 Cable USB corto Portapilas para 2 pilas AAA 2 pilas ...
Crea un hogar inteligente programando con micro:bit. Puedes usarlo para crear muchos proyectos diferentes, como un ventilador inteligente, luces activadas por voz, ventanas automáticas y más. Se adapta a la programación gráfica de ...
El Robot Maqueen para Micro:bit de DFRobot está diseñado específicamente para fomentar el interés de los niños en la ciencia y el pensamiento lógico a través de la educación STEM. ...
Incluye La placa Micro:bit V2 y el robot Maqueen El Maqueen es un robot de programación ...