Adventures in TinyAVR 1-Series

Yeah, I’ve found that to be very helpful. I just added that and a couple other sources as a “Chip Information” section in the OP.

Well… at this point, I’ve ported RampingIOS to run on the Series-1 chips (ATtiny412 / 416 / 817 / etc). That was pretty easy as almost everything was pretty self-contained. And I’ve created a couple drivers from scratch using that setup with good luck.

But now it’s time to try and tackle to larger, but more popular options… Andúril/FSM and NarsilM, here we come! I dunno exactly when I’ll get around to porting the code, but I made a development board for the ATtiny816 (or 1616 / 3216). Basically the same at the 817 except it’s 20 pin instead of 24; I don’t plan on need 24 pins anytime soon. Instead of running through regulators or FETs, I’m just using the MCU output to run the LED (limited with resistors). Since this is just for testing, I don’t need it to be bright… actually, bright is bad because I’d just be blinding myself. :sunglasses:

Thanks for the post here. One more thing: Not sharing the new dev boards? :innocent:

I just noticed I forgot an aux LED. Updating the board in a little bit and will share it then.

Alrighty… Aux LED has been added and boards re-ordered. Linky

The dev board PCBs arrived today and I made one up tonight. Looks like I’ve got some programming to do!

I think I’ll start with RampingIOS to test out the board (since I already know that works) and will move up to NarsilM and Andúril.

I’ll chime in with a small update… I’ve been working a little with getting all functionality I need running on the 3217 for a specific project. I just got the last piece of the puzzle working, OTSM.

With a 100uF cap measuring off time in 0.125 second intervals with BOD fully enabled at 1.8V threshold I got about 11 seconds with the 1634. With this new 3217 I get about 35 seconds with the same setup. Then I tested using BOD in sampled mode and got just over a minute. In sampled mode it might even be reasonable to test OTSM with a 10uF cap.

Wowsers, that’s impressive!

Sometimes I like reading datasheets for fun and to see what unexplored features are out there. I've been using Timer Counter A every time I needed PWM, but these new 1-Series chips have multiple timers including one called Timer Counter D which is described as such in the datasheet:

The Timer/Counter type D (TCD) is a high performance waveform controller that consists
of an asynchronous counter, a prescaler, compare logic, capture logic, and control logic.
The purpose of the TCD is to control power applications like LED, motor control, 
H-bridge and power converters. The TCD contains a counter that can run on a clock which 
is asynchronous from the system clock.

In essence, this allows us to use a different clock for the system than what is being used for PWM. Without the TCD, to get high resolution PWM at a high frequency, you'd need to run the system clock at a high speed (like 20 MHz), but that can consume a non-trivial amount of power (10 mA) especially if you want to drive an LED at low power for a long time. By separating the system clock and the one used by PWM, we can use the Ultra-Low Power (ULP) 32 kHz clock for the system while using the 20 MHz clock for PWM only. This can save a decent amount of power (consumption < 1 mA). To prove this out, I used Atmel's ATtiny817 Xplained Mini dev board and set it up for current measurement (removing a single 0-Ohm resistor and forcing current to pass through my DMM as explained in the Xplained Mini User Guide). The DMM used in this test is my Aneng AN8008.

The code for the PWM current tests can be found here. After conducting the current tests, I tested out the TCD functionality for driving the Xplained's on-board LED. That code can be found here.

Note: default 1-Series main clock is 3.33 MHz (20 MHz oscillator with prescaler divisor of 6)

Clock Timer Timer Clock PWM Freq. Current
Test 1 3.33 MHz none -- -- 1.9 mA
Test 2 3.33 MHz TCA, 8 bit System (3.33 MHz) 13.02 kHz 2.0 mA
Test 3 3.33 MHz TCA, 10 bit System (3.33 MHz) 3.25 kHz 2.0 mA
Test 4 3.33 MHz TCA, 12 bit System (3.33 MHz) 814 Hz 2.0 mA
Test 5 10 Mhz none -- -- 5.4 mA
Test 6 10 Mhz TCA, 8 bit System (10 Mhz) 39.06 kHz 5.5 mA
Test 7 10 Mhz TCA, 10 bit System (10 Mhz) 9.77 kHz 5.5 mA
Test 8 10 Mhz TCA, 12 bit System (10 Mhz) 2.44 kHz 5.5 mA
Test 9 20 Mhz none -- -- 10.1 mA
Test 10 20 Mhz TCA, 8 bit System (20 Mhz) 78.13 kHz 10.6 mA
Test 11 20 Mhz TCA, 10 bit System (20 Mhz) 19.53 kHz 10.6 mA
Test 12 20 Mhz TCA, 12 bit System (20 Mhz) 4.88 kHz 10.6 mA
Test 13 32 kHz none -- -- 21 uA
Test 14 32 kHz TCD, 8 bit 20 MHz 78.13 kHz 973 uA
Test 15 32 kHz TCD, 10 bit 20 MHz 19.53 kHz 970 uA
Test 16 32 kHz TCD, 12 bit 20 MHz 4.88 kHz 967 uA
Test 17 32 kHz TCD, 8 bit 10 Mhz (Prescaler: 2) 39.06 kHz 708 uA
Test 18 32 kHz TCD, 10 bit 10 Mhz (Prescaler: 2) 9.77 kHz 705 uA
Test 19 32 kHz TCD, 12 bit 10 Mhz (Prescaler: 2) 2.44 kHz 704 uA
Test 20 32 kHz TCD, 8 bit 5 Mhz (Prescaler: 4) 19.53 kHz 576 uA
Test 21 32 kHz TCD, 10 bit 5 Mhz (Prescaler: 4) 4.88 kHz 574 uA
Test 22 32 kHz TCD, 12 bit 5 Mhz (Prescaler: 4) 1.22 kHz 574 uA
Test 23 32 kHz TCD, 8 bit 2.5 Mhz (Prescaler: 8) 9.77 kHz 508 uA
Test 24 32 kHz TCD, 10 bit 2.5 Mhz (Prescaler: 8) 2.44 kHz 507 uA
Test 25 32 kHz TCD, 12 bit 2.5 Mhz (Prescaler: 8) 610 Hz 507 uA

Interesting indeed. I’ve only used TCA and TCB myself, that might change now. Thanks for posting!

Agreed. I never saw the need for it before. But if you want high frequency and reduced consumption, it looks like a good option. I’m going to try and airwire a couple of my ’412 based drivers to get a real driver running with it.

I’ve never tried running the system on the ULP clock, it does look interesting for OTSM. Your test #1 and #13 suggest that I could use pretty low rated caps for OTSM, and with TCD I see no reason to use any other clock for the system. One of these days I have to test how much reliable off time I can get from a 10uF cap at both 3.33MHz and 32kHz ULP.

Well… it only took me a year to get the time to work on this. :person_facepalming: To my defense, I brought home my 5th child (yes, 5) just a couple weeks after getting the PCBs in the mail.

In the past few days, I have managed to (1) flash the dev board using Linux (previously I had only used Atmel Studio for these newer chips) and (2) completely ported over Anduril to run on the AVR 1-Series! I’ve got it running seemingly flawlessly on the dev board. Code can be found here. I’ve tested: ramping/stepped modes, batt check, temp check, flashy modes (candle, lightning, bike, etc), button aux LEDs, etc.

Next up: get this on a proper driver and in a flashlight. This will aid in verifying full thermal regulation, battery warnings, sleep mode current draw, etc.

:partying_face: Thank you gchart! It’s a really important step for our drivers!

This is great news! Nice Job!!

[quote=gchart]

Congratulations mate. My wife would be totally envious. :beer:

Thanks, Moose! He appears to be a ReyLight fan, so I think I did ok :wink:

Your going tyo have to teach him not to look at the light when he turns the torch on. :slight_smile:
Have you planned any more? My oldest turns 27 today.

My youngest is 30, so the pic is more like a grand kid to me (got 2), which is all good

This is great news. I immediately thought of your pic12 adapter board but am not sure how easy it would be to replace a pic with an 816. Programming the 816 shouldn’t be too bad, either using an explained board or maybe an arduino. Probably switch out the battery voltage divider resistors to match anduril and remove the ntc if the light has one for temperature sensing.

Is moving the switch input and the outputs around on the 816 fairly straight forward?