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The ESP8266 Development Board Lipo for Arduino NodeMcu LUA/WiFi is a powerful tool for tech enthusiasts, featuring 12 configurable digital pins, a 0.91-inch OLED display, and a flexible working voltage range of 3.3V to 7V, making it ideal for smart home and IoT applications.
T**O
Works, It's Tough, Some Tips
Works! Took a while to reverse-engineer the OLED display with a logic analyser then back-out the pin assignments but it's worth it for this inexpensive board.Use Arduino and select 'Generic ESP8266 Module. Set the CPU to 80MHz, 40MHz flash, DIO flash mode, 921600 baud (fastest works great, any speed works), 4M (3M SPIFFS) flash size, Reset Method = nodemcu.Use any SSD1306 display library with 128x32 size (I've liked u8x8 library so far) with SCL (clock) = 5, SDA (data) = 4, and reset pin = 16.Pros:- Super inexpensive- Integrated Wifi works flawlessly right out of the box with every ESP Wifi example- OLED display on board!- Integrated Lithium battery charging?? YES FINALLY- Onboard button? Haven't used it yet.Cons:- No documentation, no pinouts, no community.- No On/off for the battery power. Hope I figure out low-power interrupt-only shutdown for my projects!
M**3
Works like a charm - I just wish there was an easy link to the board support package and some easy examples
After a bit of Googling it did come to life - I never did get the board manager to find the WIFI_Kit_8 so as the previous post said, use the generic ESP8266 and it works fine.
D**S
Careful when soldering header pins, display can't handle much heat.
Worked out of the box. I do wish the headers came pre-soldered. I soldered myself and have down so before. Made sure they were clean before plugging in, after power on screen doesn't work. Appears the display can't handle much heat.
K**N
As others have stated, it's a little tricky to ...
As others have stated, it's a little tricky to get going considering there's no documentation. Uploading a sketch follows the typical "NodeMCU/ESP-23E" guides. The OLED:- Used Adafruit SSD1306 Library- Loaded 128x32_i2c example sketch- Set OLED_RESET = 16
W**L
Cool little module
Once you figure it out, it works well. Be careful, they are very fragile
J**.
Schematics/Manual in English?
Can't find download on non English site.
B**Y
Powered by your imagination: Create the future of IOT today.
What you can do with this product is limited only by your imagination. (Some programming required.) It can turn on a light when it sees your Phone connect to your WiFi network. It can monitor the stock market and turn a light green when the market is up, or red when the market is down. It can be controlled by smart home devices like Alexa. It can monitor temperatures and send the data to a central server for graphing. It can control a LED strip, making the lights respond to the music.It is a tiny little computer that has WiFi. It can connect to the Internet (or just your local network) and talk many different protocols (HTTP, WebSockets, MTTQ, Email, Slack, etc.) You can also connect it to any electronic hardware (NeoPixels, OneWire Temperature sensors, Passive Infrared sensors, Switches, etc). This category of product is called "Internet Of Things" (IOT). Unlike many IOT devices, this is just hardware. No need to rely on someone else for a subscription service.Pro:- It's tiny: It's even smaller than a typical USB flash drive. You could hide several in a pack of gum.- About 10x more powerful than an Arduino Uno, but half the price!- If you need more power, there are bigger and better versions: ESP32 Version and LoRa Version - Can run FreeRTOS, which just got a huge boost with deep AWS Cloud integration.- Can reflash over USB (no need to push a button for programming mode) or WiFi (if you include the right library.)- can run off a LiPo battery, or any USB wall wart or most any USB battery pack.Con:- Not a lot of documentation in English. That's fine, because it's supported by Arduino IDE and PlatformIO (in next release). I highly recommend the latter.- More complex than a typical Arduino, so may not be the best starter device.(Another review said there was no Pinout documentation, but I saw it was now posted to the Heltec website. It even included clear instructions in English on which pins were reserved by the OLED display.)
W**H
kinda cool, but...
Haven't been able to get it to connect to the internet one single time. I bought a $3 NodeMCU clone at the same time as this one, and it worked the first time i programmed it. It's a shame. I really wanted this to work. The OLED is decent at least.
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