Youmile 2pcs GY-291 ADXL345 IIC/SPI Digital 3-Axis Digital Acceleration Tilt Module with Pinheader DuPont Cable for Arduino
Youmile 2pcs GY-291 ADXL345 IIC/SPI Digital 3-Axis Digital Acceleration Tilt Module with Pinheader DuPont Cable for Arduino
Product description: The ADXL345 is a small, thin, ultralow power, 3-axis accelerometer with high resolution (13-bit) measurement at up to ±16 g. Digital output data is formatted as 16-bit twos complement and is accessible through either a SPI (3- or 4-wire) or I2C digital interface. Specification: Main chip: ADXL345. Model: GY-291. Power supply: 3-5 V. Means of Communication: IIC / SPI Communication Protocol Measuring range: ±2g /±16g Digital Output Triple-Axis Accelerometer with a Programmable Full Scale Range of ±2g, ±4g, ±8g and ±16g and Integrated 16-bit ADCs Accelerometer normal operating current: 450µA. Ultralow power: as low as 23 μA in measurement mode and 0.1 μA in standby mode at VS = 2.5 V (typical). Sleep mode current: 8µA. Communication: SPI (3- and 4-wire) and I2C digital interfaces. User- Programmable Interrupts Wake-On-Motion Interrupt for Low Power Operation of Applications Processor Package includes: 2 x GY-291 ADXL345 modules. 2 x 8-pin header. 1 x 16pin male and female DuPont cable
Product Features
- Product introduction: GY-291 ADXL345 is a small, thin, extremely energy-saving 3-axis accelerometer with high resolution (13 bit) and a measuring range of 16 g
- Module features: the digital output data of the GY-291 sensor is available in 16-bit 2-complement format and is accessible via SPI (3-wire or 4-wire) or the digital I2C interface
- High resolution: GY-291 ADXL345 sensor with high resolution (3.9 mg / LSB) allows you to measure tilt angle changes of less than 1.0
- Power Saving ModeThe ADXL345 sensor supports motion-based intelligent energy management for threshold detection and motion acceleration measurement with low power consumption
- Application: ADXL345 is perfect for mobile device applications that can measure static gravitational acceleration in tilt detection applications as well as dynamic acceleration due to motion or impact