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A precision triple-axis accelerometer breakout featuring the Analog Devices ADXL335. With a ±3 g measurement range and analog outputs for X, Y, and Z axes, t...

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A precision triple-axis accelerometer breakout featuring the Analog Devices ADXL335. With a ±3 g measurement range and analog outputs for X, Y, and Z axes, this sensor is ideal for tilt sensing, motion detection, and orientation measurement in general-purpose applications.

The onboard 3.3V regulator accepts up to 5V input, making it easy to interface with Arduino and other 5V microcontrollers. Analog outputs are ratiometric: 0 g reads at 1.65V (half of 3.3V), with full linear scaling from 0V (-3 g) to 3.3V (+3 g).

Key Features

  • ±3 g Range – Ideal for tilt, orientation, and general motion sensing
  • 3 Analog Outputs – Independent X, Y, and Z axis readings
  • 5V Ready – Onboard 3.3V regulator with VCC input up to 5V
  • Ratiometric Output – Linear scaling from 0V to 3.3V across the full range
  • 50 Hz Bandwidth – 0.1 µF filter capacitors on XYZ outputs
  • Compact Breakout – 19 × 19 mm (0.75" × 0.75") with two 2 mm mounting holes

Ideal For

  • Tilt and orientation sensing
  • Motion detection and gesture recognition
  • Robotics and balancing projects
  • Vibration monitoring

Package Contents

  • 1× ADXL335 Triple-Axis Accelerometer Breakout (assembled and tested)
  • 1× 8-pin header strip

Jargon buster

Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.

3.3V regulator
A 3.3V regulator is a power circuit that provides a steady 3.3 volts for parts that need that supply voltage. On a breakout board, it can let the sensor run safely even when the connected microcontroller or power source uses a higher voltage.
breakout
A breakout is a small circuit board that makes a tiny or hard-to-solder component easier to connect to with standard pins. It matters because this OLED module can be wired into a microcontroller project without needing to solder directly to the display’s fine contacts.
Motion detection
A camera feature that checks the image for changes that suggest something has moved. It matters because your project can use movement as a trigger instead of constantly saving or processing every frame.
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