Store

DFRobot

$33.70 |
In stock
No reviews yet

This GR10-30 gesture sensor is capable of recognizing 12 hand gestures: move up, down, left, right, forward & backward, rotate clockwise & counterclockwise, ...

Estimated Delivery
Arrives
Disclaimer
View Markdown
Secure checkout
This GR10-30 gesture sensor is capable of recognizing 12 hand gestures: move up, down, left, right, forward & backward, rotate clockwise & counterclockwise, rotate clockwise & counterclockwise continuously, hover, and wave. And users can set parameters such as the gesture trigger distance, the hand rotation angle and hovering time that can be recognized, and the size of the recognition window to get more accurate results. 
The GR10-30 features stable performance and high accuracy within a sensing distance of up to 30cm. Meanwhile, it provides two interrupt pins for indicating if a gesture trigger occurs and if an object enters the recognition range.
Most gesture recognition sensors use the PAJ7620U2 chip, which has a recognition distance of 20cm and supports 9 types of hand gestures (compared to GR10-30, it lacks three gestures: clockwise and counterclockwise continuous rotation, and hovering).
The sensor is well suited to non-contact operation applications like gesture remote controllers, robot interaction, human-machine interface control, lighting control, and gesture game machine. 

Connection Diagram

Features
Maximum recognition distance of 30cm
Capable of recognizing 12 gestures
Configurable recognition threshold & other parameters 
Support UART & I2C communication

Applications
Gesture Remote Controller
Robot Interaction
Human-machine Interface Control

Specification
Supply Voltage: 3.3V to 5V
Operating Current: <10mA
I2C Address: 0x73
Serial Baud Rate: 9600
Maximum Recognition Distance: 30cm
Operating Temperature: 0°C to 70°C
Operating Humidity: 5%RH to 85%RH
Dimension: 20.5×23.5mm/0.81×0.93”

Documents

Shipping List
Fermion: GR10-30 Gesture Sensor × 1
2.54-6P Black Single-row Pin Connector × 2

Jargon buster

Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.

baud
Baud is the signalling rate of a serial connection, often used as the speed setting for UART communication. Matching the baud rate matters because both connected devices must use the same setting for readable data.
I2C
I2C is a two-wire communication bus used by many sensors and small modules. It matters because several I2C devices can share the same two wires, but each device needs a compatible address and your controller must support I2C.
I2C address
An I2C address is the number a device uses so a microcontroller can tell it apart from other devices on the same I2C bus. It matters because two devices with the same fixed address may conflict if used together.
UART
UART is a simple serial connection that sends data over separate transmit and receive wires, often labelled TX and RX. It matters because this module is designed to replace a wired UART cable with a wireless link while keeping the same serial data format.

Supplier page — dfrobot.com

Supplier Description · 1.5 MB · Click any page to view full size

Download PDF

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.