As we know that a raspberry pie uses 3.3v logic on its GPIO pins where most of the Arduino boards uses 5v, although there are 3.3v Arduino boards. it is a very common application to interface 5v and 3.3 volt logic. The i2c has voltage levels that varies the most, commonly used voltage levels are 5v and 3.3v. There are many i2c buses with 4 pins but not necessarily they have the same order. The inter-integrated bus has no standard connector for I2c unlike things like USB, there are a variety connector you can use, there is a small Molex connector that many manufacturers have latched on it but it by no mean a standard, a lot of people simply use DuPont pins and even in that case there is no standard as to what the pin note. In this article we will be interfacing 3.3v logic raspberry pie with a 5v logic Arduino board. By connecting Arduino with Raspberry Pi we can do so many amazing things. Arduino and Raspberry Pie both are the most famous and frequently used boards. But I never used them together in a single project. Bi-Directional Logic Level Converter i2c Circuit:-Īrduino and Raspberry Pie together using I2C interface- I have been using Arduino boards and Raspberry Pie for years in different basic, intermediate, and advanced level projects. ![]() ![]() Pins used for interfacing Arduino with Raspberry Pie:.Arduino and Raspberry Pie, Introduction:.
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