Next is the 433 Rx module. Carefully bend the pins before soldering it in, it's ceramic not fibreglass so it will break if not handled carefully:
2 - PCB assembly
Re: PCB assembly
Finally the movement detector. Solder the 5-pin strip onto the module first - the pins face the same way as the components on the module PCB:
Then solder the module onto the main PCB:
Finally solder the short piece of wire supplied to pad 'A' in the top right corner of the PCB - this is the 433MHz receiver antenna which you'll probably need to trim to approx. 17cm. in length.
Then solder the module onto the main PCB:
Finally solder the short piece of wire supplied to pad 'A' in the top right corner of the PCB - this is the 433MHz receiver antenna which you'll probably need to trim to approx. 17cm. in length.
Re: PCB assembly
Time for the second test - connect the 15V power supply again and switch on - you should have LED1,3 and possibly 4 on, after a few seconds LED4 should go out until movement is detected, then it will light for a couple of seconds, LED3 will flicker but remain on. Current consumption should be very close to 35mA, increasing when a BT connection is established.
Switch on the GPS mouse, once it starts to transmit valid packets (green LED flashing) you should see the yellow LED2 on the PSU board flash once a second as each packet is received. Green LED3 will flicker as each is then retransmitted to the base unit.
Try connecting to the Bluetooth receiver using a smartphone or PC dongle - it'll appear as 'Time Flies' in the device list. The code is '1234'. Sending it a test packet using a serial terminal should cause LED2 to flash, it will also send short messages back for certain events such as when a GPS packet is received.
See the operating instructions - advanced for testing the Bluetooth link.
If any of these fail, check the supply voltages and soldering around the modules.
Switch on the GPS mouse, once it starts to transmit valid packets (green LED flashing) you should see the yellow LED2 on the PSU board flash once a second as each packet is received. Green LED3 will flicker as each is then retransmitted to the base unit.
Try connecting to the Bluetooth receiver using a smartphone or PC dongle - it'll appear as 'Time Flies' in the device list. The code is '1234'. Sending it a test packet using a serial terminal should cause LED2 to flash, it will also send short messages back for certain events such as when a GPS packet is received.
See the operating instructions - advanced for testing the Bluetooth link.
If any of these fail, check the supply voltages and soldering around the modules.
Re: PCB assembly
Last bit of soldering - the PP3 connector. Solder the 2 wires as shown (under FS1 red to +, black to -):
Now jump to Case assembly.
Now jump to Case assembly.