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SD Card Data Logger Senior Design I Mid-Semester Presentation Sep 30, 2010
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Team Advisor: Dr. Patrick Donohoe James Felkins (EE)Harry Corey (EE) Brendan Babiak (EE)Jaron Martin (CPE)
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-Description of S-Drive -The Problem -The Solution -Design constraints -System overview -Tradeoffs -Timeline -Progress
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The S-Drive is an OEM module that accepts data through a serial connection and saves it to an SD card.
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SD cards are a viable storage medium with unique advantages but involve complex overhead.
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The S-Drive will handle the unwanted overhead and make SD cards a more desirable solution.
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NameDescription CommunicationThe device must have UART and SPI data connections. Voltage The device must support an input voltage between 3.3 and 5 V. Current Draw The device must draw a maximum current of 250 mA in active mode, 200 uA in sleep mode, and 10 uA in deep- sleep mode. Storage Medium The device must interface with a standard size, 32 x 24 x 2.1 mm SD card. MemoryThe device must support all SD cards up to 32 GB.
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[1] SD Version NameMaximum Capacity SD 1.xSD1 GB (revised to support 4 GB) SD 2.0SDHC32 GB SD 3.0SDXC2 TB A standard-sized SD socket allows for increase compatibility across different sizes of SD cards. 32GB was chosen to support all SD cards through the SD 2.0 specification.
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The device must cost less than $60. CompetitorPrice VDRIVE2$24.50 [4] Logomatic v2$59.95 [3] Avisaro M2051199.00 € (~$133) [2] [2] [4] [3]
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The device must easily fit and integrate into other systems. Provided on a PCB No larger than 5 in 2 Easily mountable
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PICAvailable FAT libraries? Available from Manufacturer? Estimated Sleep Current Draw PIC24FJ64GA102Yes ~10 uA PIC24HJ32GP202Yes ~100 uA
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SD Card Socket Size Size (mm)SPI Mode Standard? Supported SD card types with adapter Standard32 X 24YesStandard, Mini, Micro Mini21.5 X 20YesMini, Micro Micro15 X 11NoMicro
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Month August September October November Research Hardware design Programming Prototyping Testing Final Prototype
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Hardware Design Ordered Parts -microcontroller -SD card socket Prototype construction -SD card socket installed -power supply Began software development
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Finish software development -SD card initialization routines -FAT16, FAT32 file system management -input configuration -buffering scheme
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Problem SD card overhead is burdensome Solution S-Drive will handle overhead Design Constraints packaging, current draw, etc. Technical Tradeoffs microcontrollers (PIC24H vs. PIC24F) SD card size (standard vs. mini/micro)
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[7] Microchip, “PIC24F Family Reference Manual, Sect. 21 UART,” Microchip Technology Inc., January 26, 2010. [Online]. Available: http://ww1.microchip.com/downloads/en/DeviceDoc/en026583.pdf. [Accessed September 14, 2010]. http://ww1.microchip.com/downloads/en/DeviceDoc/en026583.pdf [8] Microchip, “PIC24F Family Reference Manual, Sect. 23 Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI),” Microchip Technology Inc., March 22, 2007. [Online]. Available:http://ww1.microchip.com/downloads/en/DeviceDoc/39699b.pdf. [Accessed September 14, 2010].http://ww1.microchip.com/downloads/en/DeviceDoc/39699b.pdf [9] STEC, “SLDSxxxBS(I)U Data Sheet,” STEC Inc., March 2008. [Online]. Available: http://www.stec- inc.com/downloads/flash_datasheets/SLSDxxxB_I_U61000-05203.pdf. [Accessed September 14, 2010].http://www.stec- inc.com/downloads/flash_datasheets/SLSDxxxB_I_U61000-05203.pdf [10] Sparkfun Electronics, “Logomatic v2 Serial SD Datalogger,” On-Line Store,2010.[Online].Available:http://www.sparkfun.com/commerce/product_info.ph p?products_id=8627. [Accessed:September 14, 2010]. [11] C-ONE Technology Corp., “Wide Temperature Industrial SD Card Product Specification,” May 2010. [Online]. Available: http://www.psism.com/c-1sd.pdf. [Accessed: September 14, 2010].http://www.psism.com/c-1sd.pdf
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