Updated Sonoff B1 (markdown)

Thomas Dietrich 2017-09-16 01:54:37 +02:00
parent 675221be8e
commit 654e169c47
1 changed files with 2 additions and 2 deletions

@ -9,8 +9,8 @@ Please see the [Hardware Preparation](https://github.com/arendst/Sonoff-Tasmota/
As always, you need to access the serial interface. First pop up the top part of the bulb with controlled force. The PCB as shown in the image will become visible. As always, you need to access the serial interface. First pop up the top part of the bulb with controlled force. The PCB as shown in the image will become visible.
The **four serial pins** (3V3, Rx, Tx, GND) as well as the GPIO0 signal line are available as test points and clearly marked. Solder wires to those or use pogo pins as you prefer.
<img alt="Sonoff B1 PCB" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2870104/30506986-b5be2882-9a80-11e7-849a-ccd65dd8a1a6.png" width="60%" align="right" /> <img alt="Sonoff B1 PCB" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2870104/30506986-b5be2882-9a80-11e7-849a-ccd65dd8a1a6.png" width="60%" align="right" />
The **four serial pins** (3V3, Rx, Tx, GND) as well as the GPIO0 signal line are available as test points and clearly marked. Solder wires to those or use pogo pins as you prefer.
As with all ESP8266 modules pulling GPIO0 to GND is needed to put the chip in programming mode. You need to **connect GPIO0 and GND** during power up. An additional GND pad is available in the middle of the PCB. As with all ESP8266 modules pulling GPIO0 to GND is needed to put the chip in programming mode. You need to **connect GPIO0 and GND** during power up. An additional GND pad is available in the middle of the PCB.