Electronics

ESP32 With CAM

AED 45.00

1

Description

The ESP32-CAM is a development board that has a WIFI+ Bluetooth development board based on the ESP32 chip with the additional option of using a camera. It is ideal for various IoT applications. with the OV2640 camera, microSD card slot, and several GPIOs to connect peripherals onboard you can create unlimited ideas and IoT Projects, such as home intelligent devices, industrial wireless control, wireless monitoring, QR wireless identification, wireless positioning system signals, and other Internet of Things applications.

Specifications of the Module:

  • Product model: HW-818
  • Working voltage: DC 5V
  • Product size: 27mm x 48.5mm x 4.5mm / 1.06” x 1.9” x 0.17”
  • SPI Flash: Default 32Mbit
  • RAM: Internal 520KB + External 4MPS RAM
  • Bluetooth: Bluetooth 4.2 BR/EDR and BLE standards
  • Wi-Fi: 802 II b/g/n/e/i
  • Support interfaces: UART, SPI, I2C, PWM
  • Supporting TF Card: Maximum Supporting 4G
  • IO port: 9
  • Serial port rate: default 115200 bps
  • Image output format: JPEG (OV2640 only), BMP, GRAYSCALE
  • Spectrum range: 2412-2484MHz
  • Antenna form: board PCB antenna, gain 2dBi
  • Transmission power:
  • 802.l1b: 17 + 2dBm (1lMbps)
  • 802.l1g:14+2dBm (54Mbps)
  • 802.l1n:13+2dBm (MCS7)

 

Camera Specifications

The ESP32-CAM includes an OV2640 camera module. The device also supports OV7670 cameras. The OV2640 has the following specifications:

  • 2 Megapixel sensor
  • Array size UXGA 1622×1200
  • Output formats include YUV422, YUV420, RGB565, RGB555 and 8-bit compressed data
  • Image transfer rate of 15 to 60 fps

 

Note: You must first connect the ESP32-CAM to an FTDI adapter before you can program it. In our UART interface, the TxD pin is GPIO 1 and the TxR pin is GPIO 3. Because Rx and Tx must be linked crossed, the FTDI adapter's GPIO 1 pin is assigned to Rx and the GPIO 3 pin is assigned to Tx.

 

Package Included:

1 x  ESP32-CAM Module

1 x OV2640 camera 

 

Hardware Included on the Board:

 

Pinout of the Module:

Die ESP32-CAM – einfach erklärt! – Edis Techlab