The Motor Shield is based on the L298, which is a dual full-bridge
driver designed to drive inductive loads such as relays,solenoids, DC
and stepping motors. It lets you drive two DC motors with your for
Arduino board, controlling the speed and direction of each one
independently. You can also measure the motor current absorption of each
motor, among other features. The shield is TinkerKit compatible.
The
Motor Shield must be powered only by an external power supply.Because
the L298 IC mounted on the shield has two separate power connections,one
for the logic and one for the motor supply driver. The required motor
current often exceeds the maximum USB current rating.
The adapter can
be connected by plugging a 2.1mm center-positive plug into the for
Arduino's board power jack on which the motor shield is mounted or by
connecting the wires that lead the power supply to the Vin and GND screw
terminals,taking care to respect the polarities
To avoid possible
damage to the for Arduino board on which the shield is mounted,we
recommend using an external power supply that provides a voltage between
7 and 12V.If your motor require more than 9V we recommend that you
separate the power lines of the shield and the for Arduino board on
which the shield is mounted. The absolute limit for the Vin at the screw
terminals is 18V.
If you don't need the Brake and the Current
Sensing and you also need more pins for your application you can disable
this features by cutting the respective jumpers on the back side of the
shield.
The additional sockets on the shield are described as follow:
Screw terminal to connect the motors and their power supply.
2 TinkerKit connectors for two Analog Inputs (in white), connected to A2 and A3.
2 TinkerKit connectors for two Aanlog Outputs (in orange in the middle), connected to PWM outputs on pins D5 and D6.
2 TinkerKit connectors for the TWI interface (in white with 4 pins), one for input and the other one for output.
Motors connections:
Brushed
DC motor. You can drive two Brushed DC motors by connecting the two
wires of each one in the (+) and (-) screw terminals for each channel A
and B. In this way you can control its direction by setting HIGH or LOW
the DIR Aand DIR B pins, you can control the speed by varying the PWM A
and PWM B duty cycle values. The Brake A andBrake B pins, if set HIGH,
will effectively brake the DC motors rather than let them slow down by
cutting the power. You can measure the current going through the DC
motor by reading the SNS0 and SNS1 pins. On each channel will be a
voltage proportional to the measured current, which can be read as a
normal analog input, through the function analogRead() on the analog
input A0 and A1. For your convenience it is calibrated to be 3.3V when
the channel is delivering its maximum possible current, that is 2A.
color: blue
Material: PC + metal