Store

Adafruit

· MPN: ADA5939

$8.54 |
Out of stock
No reviews yet

The Adafruit Infrared IR Remote Receiver is a sensitive, wide-range 38 kHz IR receiver board with two selectable sensor orientations — one vertical and one h...

Get notified when back in stock

Qty
Estimated Delivery
Arrives
Disclaimer
View Markdown
Secure checkout

The Adafruit Infrared IR Remote Receiver is a sensitive, wide-range 38 kHz IR receiver board with two selectable sensor orientations — one vertical and one horizontal. A slide switch lets you choose which sensor to read from, making it easy to mount in any position within your enclosure or project.

Using a STEMMA JST PH 2 mm cable, you can wire this board without any soldering. Point any standard 38 kHz IR remote at the sensors, and the demodulated signal is output to your microcontroller for decoding. Green power and red signal LEDs provide visual confirmation that the board is powered and receiving IR signals.

Key Features

  • Dual IR Receiver Sensors – Vertical and horizontal 38 kHz receivers with slide switch selection
  • STEMMA JST PH 2 mm Connector – Solderless 3-pin connection for power, ground, and signal
  • 3V – 5V Compatible – Works with a wide range of microcontrollers
  • Demodulated Signal Output – Clean envelope output ready for microcontroller decoding
  • Status LEDs – Green power LED and red signal LED for visual feedback
  • Independent Sensor Pads – Optional solder pads to read both sensors independently
  • Mounting Holes – Easy to mount in enclosures and on devices
  • Breadboard Option – 0.1" header pads for soldered breadboard connections

Ideal For

  • IR remote control receivers for home automation
  • Media player and appliance remote control projects
  • Enclosure-mounted IR receiver installations
  • Arduino and Raspberry Pi IR decoding projects

Package Contents

  • 1× Adafruit Infrared IR Remote Receiver Board (assembled and tested)
Note: STEMMA JST PH cable is not included. This board is specifically for receiving 38 kHz IR remote control signals — it is not suitable for proximity/distance sensing or other frequency signals. Your microcontroller must support pulse-input reading and IR decoding.

Resources

Jargon buster

Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.

38 kHz IR
Infrared light that is switched on and off 38,000 times per second, a common carrier frequency used by IR remotes and beam sensors. Matching this frequency matters because the receiver is tuned for it and will ignore much of the steady or random infrared light in the environment.
JST PH
A small keyed plug-and-socket connector with 2 mm pin spacing, often used for low-power electronics connections. You need the correct JST PH cable, and its current rating limits how much power should be passed through it.
LED
A light-emitting diode is a small electronic component that lights up when current flows through it in the correct direction. In this kit, LEDs create the flashing effect, so polarity and correct soldering matter for the project to work.
microcontroller
A microcontroller is a small computer on a chip that runs your program and controls connected inputs and outputs. For this product, it is the part that reads buttons and sensors, drives the display and speaker, and communicates over Bluetooth.
pH
A measure of how acidic or alkaline a liquid is, on a scale where 7 is neutral. For a water monitoring kit, pH tells you about water chemistry and whether the included probe matches the range and accuracy your project needs.
STEMMA
A plug-and-cable connection system used on some maker electronics boards to make wiring simpler. If a product uses STEMMA, you need the matching cable or connector type to plug it in without soldering.

Related Tutorials

Free guides on learn.littlebird.com.au

Stella
Stella Expert

Ask me anything about this product

Maddy, co-founder of Little Bird

Need help? We're here for you!

Hi, I'm Maddy. My team and I are ready to help with your order or any questions.