tft 3.5 lcd module display for arduino mega2560 in stock
This TFT 3.5 Inch LCD display support 480x320 pixel resolutions. The display uses the ILI9481 graphics controller. The module includes the 5V-3.3V power conversion circuit and no additional level conversion circuitry is required. This Module can be inserted directly into the Arduino Mega2560 Board.
This is a 3.5-inch 320 * 480 resolution TFT color screen. It supports working boards such as Arduino uno and Arduino mega2560 and Arduino due. Also supports STM32, 51 and other conventional microcontrollers.
When using this screen, you do not need any wiring operations, just plug onto your arduino board, we will provide the corresponding Arduino library files, the development code is open source, you can use arduino and this screen to build some applications.The backlight always on, can not control the backlight, backlight is connect to 3.3V.
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This TFT display is big (3.5″ diagonal) bright and colourful! 480×320 pixels with individual RGB pixel control, this has way more resolution than a black and white 128×64 display, and double our 2.8″ TFT. As a bonus, this display has a resistive touchscreen sensor allowing you to control your application simply by touching any area of the screen. This display has a controller built into it with RAM buffering so that almost no work is done by the microcontroller. This LCD module is suitable for a user who requires high resolution and brightness, brilliant and all angle viewable display quality, display quality is as good as standard mobile screens. The display can be used in two modes: 8-bit or SPI. For the 8-bit mode, you’ll need 8 digital data lines and 4 or 5 digital control lines to read and write to the display (12 lines total). SPI mode requires only 5 pins total (SPI data in, data out, clock, select, and d/c) but is slower than the 8-bit mode. In addition, It requires 4 pins for the touchscreen (2 digital, 2 analogues). This is the larger version of the 2.4″ display designed specifically for the Arduino Mega. This 3.5″ display and is designed to fit directly into the standard headers of an Arduino Mega requiring no additional interface hardware. The backlight is always on, can not control the backlight, the backlight is connected to 3.3V. It Can be easily controlled by MCU such as 8051, PIC, AVR, Arduino, and ARM etc.
The control and driving circuit of TFT modules are low voltage and FRIDA micro-power CMOS circuit, can be easily damaged by static, static damage is irreparable damage, and sometimes humans have hundreds of volts of high voltage static electricity, therefore, in handling, assembling and use should be extremely careful to prevent static electricity:Using a soldering iron or power FRIDA tools must be well-grounded and operational, make them without leakage;
If it is necessary to directly contact it, should enable the human body in the same potential as the modules? , or make the human body be well-grounded.
Spice up your Arduino project with a beautiful large touchscreen display shield with built in microSD card connection. This TFT display is big (5" diagonal) bright (12 white-LED backlight) and colorful 480x272 pixels with individual pixel control. As a bonus, this display has a capacitive touch panel attached on screen by default.
The shield is fully assembled, tested and ready to go. No wiring, no soldering! Simply plug it in and load up our library - you"ll have it running in under 10 minutes! Works best with any classic Arduino Mega 2560.
This display shield has a controller built into it with RAM buffering, so that almost no work is done by the microcontroller. You can connect more sensors, buttons and LEDs.
Of course, we wouldn"t just leave you with a datasheet and a "good luck!" - we"ve written a full open source graphics library at the bottom of this page that can draw pixels, lines, rectangles, circles and text. We also have a touch screen library that detects x,y and z (pressure) and example code to demonstrate all of it. The code is written for Arduino but can be easily ported to your favorite microcontroller!
If you"ve had a lot of Arduino DUEs go through your hands (or if you are just unlucky), chances are you’ve come across at least one that does not start-up properly.The symptom is simple: you power up the Arduino but it doesn’t appear to “boot”. Your code simply doesn"t start running.You might have noticed that resetting the board (by pressing the reset button) causes the board to start-up normally.The fix is simple,here is the solution.