User/LisaM
Introduction
If you consider yourself a developer this autopilot board is for you. If you enjoy writing software and consider yourself an early adopter this hardware is for you. Have fun and see you on the paparazzi mailinglist, the wiki and the freenode irc channel. This nice piece of hardware can be used for various purposes
Features
Lisa/M is based on the 64 pins STM32F103RE processor featuring 64k of RAM and 512k of FLASH. All the pins are exposed, providing access to the complete set of the STM32 peripherals.
Overview
- Single STM32 MCU
- 7 x Analog input channels
- 3 x Generic digital in-/out-puts
- 2 x 3.3V TTL UART (5V tolerant)
- 7 x Servo PPM outputs
- 1 x CAN bus
- 1 x SPI bus
- 1 x I2C bus
- 1 x Micro USB
- 4 x status LEDs with attached test point
- ? grams (? oz)
- ~30mm x ~50mm (" x ")
- 2 layers PCB design
with mounted IMU has the following additional sensors on board:
- 3 Axis Gyroscope
- 3 Axis Accelerometer
- 3 Axis Magnetometer
- Pressure sensor
The pressure sensor is mounted directly on the board as this sensor is not provided by Aspirin. Exept for a GPS unit you have all necessary sensors for full attitude and altitude stabilization in an extremely small package. Adding only an external GPS unit, it is a full fledged Autopilot.
Footprint
This autopilot is very small. The footprint is only 30mm by 50mm. It will fit in a small UAS very well. There is a spot for mounting the Aspirin IMU directly on board.
MCU
In brief, the STM32 features 3 USARTS, 2 SPI, 2 I2C, 1 CAN, a plethora of timers, ADCs and a generic DMA able to serve all of them. On the board, a number of the communication interfaces are level shifted with user selectable voltage to allow interfacing with all kind of peripherals.
IMU
The Lisa/M comes with Aspirin IMU mounted, for easy attitude estimation in the smallest package possible.
JTAG
Information about debugging can be found here
Hardware Revision History
v1.00
Architecture
Pinout
Pins Name and Type are specified with respect to the Autopilot Board
Schematic
Electrical Connections to the Airborne Equipment
PCB
Gerber & Drill Files
Assembly
Components Layout
Mechanical drawing
Bill Of Material
Setup
Bootloader
Connect Receivers
To be able to test your UAS a RC receiver comes in very handy.
PPM receiver
A modified RC receiver with full PWM out can be used to control the AP board from the ground.
Satellite Receiver
Connecting a 2.4 Spectrum compatible receiver
Power supply jumpers
It is possible to reconfigure the electrical system on Lisa/M using the supply jumpers.
- JP1 connects the servo power rail to V_IN rail.
- JP2 connects the battery rail (used by default only for battery voltage measurement) to the V_IN rail.
- JP3 bypasses the +5V voltage regulator and connects V_IN to the +5V rail.
- JP4 connects the +5V rail to the VCC pin on the UART2 connector.
- JP5 connects the +3V3 rail to the VCC pin on the UART2 connector.
- JP6 connects the +5V rail to the VCC pin on the UART1 connector.
- JP7 connects the +3V3 rail to the VCC pin on the UART1 connector.
PCB and assembled boards suppliers
For private companies and enthusiast Paparazzi hardware suppliers, see Get Hardware page.
Downloads
Source files
- download LisaM v1.00 Eagle design (zip)
Gerber & Drill files
- download gerber & drill files (zip)
Assembly files
- download (pdf)
- download (zipped .xls file)