ElecFreaks
Arduino Starter Kit (Absolute Beginner)
Resources: Included 1 x Freaduino UNO 20.4usd 1 x mini USB Cable 1 x 5mm LED Brick 1.5usd 1 x PushButton Bri...




Resources:
Included
1 x Freaduino UNO 20.4usd
1 x mini USB Cable
1 x 5mm LED Brick 1.5usd
1 x PushButton Brick 1.5usd
1 x LDR Sensor Brick 3.5usd
1 x Vibration senor Brick 3.5usd
1 x Passive Buzzer Brick 2.0usd
1 x PIR sensor Brick 4.2usd
1 x Soil Moisture Sensor Brick 2.45usd
1 x 1Channel Relay Brick 4.2usd
1 x Rotary Encoder Brick 3.98usd
1 x mini Servo 6.5usd
1 x Temperature And Humidity Sensor brick 3.9usd
1 x Segment LED Brick 2.98usd
1 x IR receive sensor brick 2.9usd
1 x Infrared Remote Control 2.5usd
1 x mini Motor 4.2usd
1 x mini Fan
30 x Jumper wires 2.9usd
1 x Box
Please visit the ElecFreaks wiki page for more info about this product. It will be appreciated if you can help us improve the documents, add more demo code or tutorials.
Jargon buster
Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.
- encoder
- A device attached to a motor or shaft that reports movement, such as rotation steps or position. In a pump system, an encoder can help measure or control how much the motor has turned, which affects how repeatable the watering amount can be.
- LDR
- A light-dependent resistor is a component whose resistance changes with light level. It is useful for simple brightness sensing, and an ADC board is needed to turn its changing analogue voltage into numbers a microcontroller or computer can read.
- 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.
- PIR sensor
- A passive infrared sensor detects changes in heat, usually from a person moving across its view. It matters because PIR sensors are common for lights and alarms, but they can miss people who are present but not moving much.
- servo
- A servo is a motor with built-in position control, usually told to move to a specific angle by a control signal. It matters when you need repeatable movement, such as steering, arms, flaps, or linkages, rather than continuous spinning.
Find this product in
Arduino
STEM & Education
Related Tutorials
Free guides on learn.littlebird.com.au