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Adafruit

· MPN: ADA6353

$11.65 |
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The Adafruit STSPIN220 Stepper Motor Driver Breakout makes controlling bipolar stepper motors simple with a GPIO-only interface — just two pins (DIR and STEP...

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The Adafruit STSPIN220 Stepper Motor Driver Breakout makes controlling bipolar stepper motors simple with a GPIO-only interface — just two pins (DIR and STEP) are all you need. It defaults to 1/16 microstepping and supports up to 1/256 microstepping via mode pin configuration, making it ideal for smooth, precise motion in low-voltage applications.

Designed for prototyping, the board features screw terminal blocks for motor power and stepper wires, labelled control pins, mounting holes, and LED indicators for direction and step activity. An onboard potentiometer sets the current limit up to ~1.3A.

Key Features

  • STSPIN220 Driver – 1.8–10V motor voltage, up to 1.3A per coil
  • Up to 1/256 Microstepping – Default 1/16; configurable via DIR/STEP/MS1/MS2 pins on reset
  • GPIO-Only Control – No timers, PWM, or UART needed — just DIR and STEP pins
  • 3–5V Logic – Works with Arduino, ESP32, Raspberry Pi, and more
  • Current Limit Potentiometer – Adjustable up to ~1.3A
  • LED Indicators – Red/green for direction, yellow for step activity
  • Screw Terminal Blocks – For motor power and 4-wire bipolar stepper (20–26 AWG)
  • Overcurrent Protection – Built into the driver chip
  • 47 µF 16V Capacitor – On motor power rail
  • Four Mounting Holes – Easy to secure in enclosures

Ideal For

  • Low-voltage stepper motor projects (1.8–10V)
  • CNC machines and 3D printers
  • Robotics and precise positioning
  • Prototyping with bipolar stepper motors

Package Contents

  • 1× STSPIN220 stepper driver breakout (assembled and tested)
  • 1× Header strip
Note: Some soldering required to attach headers. Microcontroller, stepper motor, and power supply not included. A heatsink may be needed at higher currents (not included).

Resources

Jargon buster

Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.

AWG
American Wire Gauge is a numbering system for wire thickness, where a lower number means a thicker wire. The AWG rating matters because thicker wire can usually carry more current with less voltage drop and heating.
breakout
A breakout board carries a small or fine-pitched component and brings its connections out to standard, breadboard- and header-friendly pins. Describing a part as a breakout means it can be wired into a project without soldering directly to the component's tiny contacts.
ESP32
ESP32 is a family of low-cost microcontroller chips and modules from Espressif with built-in WiFi and Bluetooth. They support programmable firmware and over-the-air updates, and are commonly programmed with toolchains such as the Arduino core and ESP-IDF.
GPIO
General-purpose input/output pins are microcontroller pins you can set in software to read signals, switch devices on and off, or connect to peripherals. The number of GPIO pins matters because it limits how many buttons, LEDs, sensors, and other parts you can wire directly to the board.
Headers
Rows of connector contacts on a fixed pitch (commonly 2.54 mm) used to link a board to a breadboard, jumper wires, or another board. They come as male pin headers and female socket headers; when a module ships with pre-soldered headers it can be used straight away, whereas bare pads require soldering the pins yourself.
LED
A light-emitting diode (LED) is a small electronic component that emits light when current flows through it in the correct direction. Because it only conducts one way, its polarity matters, and a through-hole LED must be soldered the correct way around to light up.
microcontroller
A microcontroller is a small computer on a single chip that runs a stored program and controls connected inputs and outputs such as buttons, sensors, displays and communication interfaces. In a device built around one, it is the part that executes the code and coordinates the device's behaviour.
motor driver
An electronic circuit that lets a low-power controller switch and control a motor that needs more current than the controller pins can safely provide. Checking motor driver support matters because pumps and motors usually cannot be connected directly to a microcontroller output.
potentiometer
A variable resistor usually turned with a knob or shaft to create an adjustable electrical signal. It is often used for inputs such as volume, brightness or position, so it helps beginners learn how a microcontroller reads changing values.
PWM
Pulse Width Modulation is a way for a digital pin to simulate variable output power by switching on and off very quickly. It matters for controlling things like LED brightness, motor speed, or servo-style signals from a microcontroller pin.
UART
UART is a simple asynchronous serial interface that sends data over separate transmit and receive wires, usually labelled TX and RX, with both ends set to the same baud rate. It is a common way for microcontrollers and other serial devices to exchange data.

Related Tutorials

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