Adafruit Pi T-Cobbler Breakout Kit for Raspberry Pi

C$8.97

  • Model: SPL-ADA-1105
  • Shipping Weight: 0.01Kg
  • 3 Units in Stock
  • Manufactured by: Adafruit

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Now that you've finally got your hands on a Raspberry Pi, you're probably itching to make some fun embedded computer projects with it. What you need is an add on prototyping Pi T-Cobbler, which can break out all those tasty power, GPIO, I2C and SPI pins from the 26 pin header onto a solderless breadboard. This mini kit will make "cobbling together" prototypes with the Pi super easy. Designed for Raspberry Pi Model B Revision 1 or Revision 2. 


This Cobbler is in a fancy T-shape, which is not as compact, but is a little easier to read the labels.  


The Pi T-Cobbler mini kit comes with a 26 pin ribbon cable, a custom PCB, ribbon cable socket and header pins. A little soldering is required to put it together but its really easy, even a beginner can do it in 15 minutes. Once soldered together, the cable plugs between the Pi computer and the T-Cobbler breakout. The T-Cobbler can plug into any solderless breadboard (or even a prototyping board like the PermaProto). The T-Cobbler PCB has all the pins labeled nicely so you can go forth and build circuits without keeping a pin-out printout at your desk. We think this will make it more fun to expand the Pi and build custom circuitry with it. 


The Adafruit Pi T-Cobbler is compatible with both versions 1 and 2 of the Raspberry Pi Computer - for version 2 computers, note that the GPIO #21 has been replaced with GPIO #27 and that the I2C pins are now I2C port #1 instead of #0. All other pins are the same. 


What is the Raspberry Pi? A low-cost ARM GNU/Linux box.

The Raspberry Pi is a single-board computer developed in the UK by the Raspberry Pi Foundation with the intention of stimulating the teaching of basic computer science in schools. The design is based on a Broadcom BCM2835 system on a chip (SoC), which includes an ARM1176JZF-S 700 MHz processor, VideoCore IV GPU, and 256 megabytes of RAM. The design does not include a built-in hard disk or solid-state drive, instead relying on an SD card for booting and long-term storage. The Foundation plans to support Fedora Linux as the initial system software package/distribution, with support for Debian and Arch Linux as well - Wikipedia.


Raspberry Pi is a trademark of the Raspberry Pi Foundation.


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