Adafruit
Mini Basic PIR Sensor - BL412
The BL412 is a compact passive infrared (PIR) motion sensor designed for detecting movement from people and animals at distances of approximately 3–8 m. Much...
The BL412 is a compact passive infrared (PIR) motion sensor designed for detecting movement from people and animals at distances of approximately 3–8 m. Much smaller than standard PIR modules, it is well suited for unobtrusive projects and fits easily on breadboards or perfboard.
The sensor runs on 3.3 V and requires only power, ground, and an optional resistor divider to set the output hold time — from 2 seconds (pin 2 tied to ground) up to one hour (pin 2 at 3.3 V). The digital signal output is 3.3 V high/low. The snap-on lens provides a 120° detection spread focused at approximately 5 m.
Key Features
- Compact Size – Smaller than standard PIR modules for discreet installations
- 3.3 V Operation – Low-voltage, breadboard-friendly
- Adjustable Hold Time – 2 seconds to 1 hour via resistor divider on pin 2
- 120° Detection Angle – Wide field of view with snap-on lens
- Simple Wiring – Only 4 pins: GND, on-time, VCC, signal
Wiring
- Pin 1 – Ground
- Pin 2 – On-time control (ground for 2 s; resistor divider for longer delays)
- Pin 3 – 3.3 V power
- Pin 4 – Digital signal output (3.3 V high when motion detected)
Specifications
- Model – BL412
- Supply Voltage – 3.3 V
- Detection Range – Approximately 3–8 m (optimised at 5 m)
- Detection Angle – 120°
- Output – Digital, 3.3 V high/low
- Hold Time – 2 s to 1 hour (adjustable)
- Sensor Window – 5 × 3.8 mm
Ideal For
- Motion-activated lighting and alarms
- Occupancy detection projects
- Low-power battery-operated sensors
- Arduino and Raspberry Pi motion sensing
Package Contents
- 1× BL412 Mini PIR sensor with snap-on lens
Resources
Jargon buster
Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.
- 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.
- 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.
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Brands
Sensors & Input
Related Tutorials
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