This is the new version of the Mega Lithium BackPack, a specially designed version of the Lithium BackPack Chris, Mike, and I built for the new Arduino Mega. Over the past few weeks, I got a lot of emails about folks who really badly wanted a backpack for the Mega, so I took a vacation day and built one. (ps thanks to pete, who helped proofread the schematic and suggested the new arrangement of power rails, and chris who looked over my shoulder the whole time).
The Mega Lithium BackPack is an Open Source Hardware battery shield for the Arduino Mega that snaps to the back of the board, and provides around 15-27 hours of battery power to circuits built with the Arduino Mega (depending on the circuit). It gives a 3.3 volt, 5 volt, ground, and battery capacity testing signal that can be plugged into the Analog input port to test how much battery power is left.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi9-BAadyypYvAV36z1L1B797-44tEufdB2gay5QjwDAGrUOcLK9GyYDHW_TRIrdN2bshTXYpmMFv3TxrafmReQBgcztBE_fq348TLUpmqnFNpVPzCPqV95mUHK0EgNu0HvvQqVauDkEOA/s400/Mega+Arduino+and+BackPack.jpg)
Here's a picture of the first official Mega BackPack ever built (I lost my other camera, so I had to take this picture with my iPhone, which is old generation, and I hate it because it gets more and more outdated every other month, and I wish I could just swap out the camera in it):
Just like the original Arduino's, the Arduino Mega has these neat little screw holes in strategically placed locations throughout the board, that make for great places to put small stand-offs, that allow the Backpack to hang on to the backside of the Arduino without moving around:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEicQLvgK61RFX5PMqUCzmsuDuMGIvglpMVOrAFO3Tcbwvs9QeV7ybe31FhPfEHXani2OhAXJj6QzqWCYs8lUPdtQ9qaYb19xb0jZgCbs4CILBtj1OvUGSnnMcdYQ0VgXvDuste-KuR6xJE/s400/Mega+BackPack+On+Back.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhEjD3OW9BiooEwk7AFHZT_k2kzSBjhqN21drg2tgNSgwyTPmgCDkIY6DS9rbGMvP_n6Mnyhhsp1YlZQpW3pKehGU6ucSEmBMkoGbBWva0_5-nm7xKO4idjnjFcim8MinkipaRSs4vKSMo/s400/Mega+and+BackPack+and+Arduino+and+BackPack.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjvpRkES24JJW1UNef3U5KBxPMYFcsYEFMBCmLOcW1ily1ZvYSc0ctcCPghMfVaS3UxdQOhltBiWim4hm8cbc1P0UB0_ypd-8chDWsbGppqC2pMSFhY8T4ndESt_OKwl7qLnsQuhtxgEck/s400/Mega+BackPack.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi2aJTbRu61qFGNj0DzEPpFtJVroBJrIJtS7M2jrYm0JPl5039TcIZSbwbwV6U9dpotWV3jdV8usH2StBQdqbP1Pz43OV96rqmZjYS36W9Jqw0hrWdzauUz4mU7Uwj4kgakH8D4WtU3H1A/s400/Mega+BackPack+Closeup+Lines.jpg)
I just uploaded a bunch of the other pictures I took over at Flickr, and I listed some for sale by themselves, or in starter packs with Arduino mega's.
As long as I'm building them myself (and with Justin and Mike's help, and anyone else who might want to make the trip down to Connecticut, the Mega backpack's will be the same price as the original Lithium Backpack, until I get tired of soldering them myself - ha)
1 comment:
i also put up a video over on youtube, here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sj6mrOTfGZY
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