Skip to content
joric edited this page Feb 8, 2024 · 411 revisions

nRFMicro pinout

This pinout works for all boards. You can also copy values from custom_board.h (see jorne_ble.c macros implementation).

nRFMicro nice!nano ProMicro Left Right ProMicro nice!nano nRFMicro
P0.06 P0.06 D3 PIN1 PIN24 RAW RAW RAW
P0.08 P0.08 D2 PIN2 PIN23 GND GND GND
GND GND GND PIN3 PIN22 RST P0.18 P0.18
GND GND GND PIN4 PIN21 VCC VCC VCC
P0.15 P0.17 D1 PIN5 PIN20 F4 P0.31 P0.30
P0.17 P0.20 D0 PIN6 PIN19 F5 P0.29 P0.31
P0.20 P0.22 D4 PIN7 PIN18 F6 P0.02 P0.29
P0.13 P0.24 C6 PIN8 PIN17 F7 P1.15 P0.02
P0.24 P1.00 D7 PIN9 PIN16 B1 P1.13 P1.13
P0.09 P0.11 E6 PIN10 PIN15 B3 P1.11 P0.03
P0.10 P1.04 B4 PIN11 PIN14 B2 P0.10 P0.28
P1.06 P1.06 B5 PIN12 PIN13 B6 P0.09 P1.11

nRFMicro service pins

  • P0.18 - RESET
  • P1.10 - BLUE_LED (P0.15 on nice!nano)
  • P1.09 - POWER_PIN (EXT_VCC control since 1.0, P0.13 on nice!nano) (1-off, 0-on)
  • P0.26 - SWITCH_PIN (battery on/off state, from 0.03 to 1.1)
  • P0.04 - BATTERY_PIN (analog battery voltage in mV, since 1.1, MUST BE analog pin, e.g. P0.04 is AIN2)
  • P0.05 - PROG_PIN (charger prog pin, 1.2-1.3 only, set to 0 or internal 13K pull-down for charging)
  • P0.07 - STAT_PIN (charger stat pin, 1.2 only, mostly unused)

nRFMicro unassigned (free) pins

These pins are available on the back side via through hole pads:

  • P1.04
  • P1.02
  • P1.00
  • P0.22
  • P0.12
  • P0.26 (free since 1.2)
  • P0.07 (free since 1.3)

These pins are free on the top side of the module:

  • P0.00 (XL1)
  • P0.01 (XL2)
  • P0.05 (free since 1.4)

So there are 10 free pins (including top side). Revision 1.4 may use P0.00 and P0.01 with the Crystal (you can desolder it).

These pins can be used to enter OTA mode (see Bootloader):

  • P1.02 DFU (BUTTON_1)
  • P0.12 FRST (BUTTON_2)

The underside unused pin P0.12 (apparently) cannot be used for I2C which has pull-down resistors. This pin is used by (PCA10056) bootloader. Doing so results in continuous looping of dfu bootloader mode. You might need to choose the appropriate bootloader that doesn't use this pin as FRST button (or maybe just don't use pull-down resistors). See Bootloader.

Low-drive pins

You're not supposed to use low drive pins for I2C protocol and RGB data (though I think I2C OLEDs are fine, they're sub-10kHz).

They are actually "standard drive, low frequency" pins. They can be found in the nRF52840 Product Specification (page 576):

Normal (high frequency) pins are:

  • P0.00, P0.01, P0.26, P0.27, P0.04, P0.05, P0.06, P0.07, P0.08, P1.08, P1.09, P0.11, P0.12, P0.14, P0.16, P0.18, P0.19, P0.21, P0.23, P0.25, P0.13, P0.15, P0.17, P0.20, P0.22, P0.24, P1.00

Low drive (low frequency) pins are:

  • P0.31, P0.29, P0.02, P1.15, P1.13, P1.10, P0.30, P0.28, P0.03, P1.14, P1.12, P1.11, P0.10, P0.09, P1.07, P1.06, P1.05, P1.04, P1.03, P1.02, P1.01

nRF52840 pin assignments

(Pins AIN0-AIN7 may be used as analog input.)

Pin Name Function Description Recommended usage
A8 P0.31 (AIN7) Digital I/O General purpose I/O Standard drive, low frequency I/O only
A10 P0.29 (AIN5) Digital I/O General purpose I/O Standard drive, low frequency I/O only
A12 P0.02 (AIN0) Digital I/O General purpose I/O Standard drive, low frequency I/O only
A14 P1.15 Digital I/O General purpose I/O Standard drive, low frequency I/O only
A16 P1.13 Digital I/O General purpose I/O Standard drive, low frequency I/O only
A18 Dec 02 Power 1.3 V regulator supply decoupling
A20 P1.10 Digital I/O General purpose I/O Standard drive, low frequency I/O only
A22 VDD Power Power supply
A23 XC2 Analog input Connection for 32 MHz crystal
B1 VDD Power Power supply
B3 DCC Power DC/DC converter output
B5 Dec 04 Power 1.3 V regulator supply decoupling
B7 VSS Power Ground
B9 P0.30 (AIN6) Digital I/O General purpose I/O Standard drive, low frequency I/O only
B11 P0.28 (AIN4) Digital I/O General purpose I/O Standard drive, low frequency I/O only
B13 P0.03 (AIN1) Digital I/O General purpose I/O Standard drive, low frequency I/O only
B15 P1.14 Digital I/O General purpose I/O Standard drive, low frequency I/O only
B17 P1.12 Digital I/O General purpose I/O Standard drive, low frequency I/O only
B19 P1.11 Digital I/O General purpose I/O Standard drive, low frequency I/O only
B24 XC1 Analog input Connection for 32 MHz crystal
C1 Dec 01 Power 1.1 V regulator supply decoupling
D2 P0.00 (XL1) Digital I/O General purpose I/O
D23 Dec 03 Power Power supply, decoupling
E24 Dec 06 Power 1.3 V regulator supply decoupling
F2 P0.01 (XL2) Digital I/O General purpose I/O
F23 VSS_PA Power Ground (radio supply)
G1 P0.26 Digital I/O General purpose I/O
H2 P0.27 Digital I/O General purpose I/O
H23 ANT RF Antenna connection See Reference circuitry on page 583
J1 P0.04 (AIN2) Digital I/O General purpose I/O
J24 P0.10 (NFC2) Digital I/O General purpose I/O Standard drive, low frequency I/O only
K2 P0.05 (AIN3) Digital I/O General purpose I/O
L1 P0.06 Digital I/O General purpose I/O
L24 P0.09 (NFC1) Digital I/O General purpose I/O Standard drive, low frequency I/O only
M2 P0.07 Digital I/O General purpose I/O
N1 P0.08 Digital I/O General purpose I/O
N24 Dec 05 Power 1.3 V regulator supply decoupling
P2 P1.08 Digital I/O General purpose I/O
P23 P1.07 Digital I/O General purpose I/O Standard drive, low frequency I/O only
R1 P1.09 Digital I/O General purpose I/O
R24 P1.06 Digital I/O General purpose I/O Standard drive, low frequency I/O only
T2 P0.11 Digital I/O General purpose I/O
T23 P1.05 Digital I/O General purpose I/O Standard drive, low frequency I/O only
U1 P0.12 Digital I/O General purpose I/O
U24 P1.04 Digital I/O General purpose I/O Standard drive, low frequency I/O only
V23 P1.03 Digital I/O General purpose I/O Standard drive, low frequency I/O only
W1 VDD Power Power supply
W24 P1.02 Digital I/O General purpose I/O Standard drive, low frequency I/O only
Y2 VDDH Power High voltage power supply
Y23 P1.01 Digital I/O General purpose I/O Standard drive, low frequency I/O only
AA24 SWDCLK Debug Serial wire debug clock input
AB2 DCCH Power DC/DC converter output
AC5 DECUSB Power 3.3 V regulator supply decoupling
AC9 P0.14 Digital I/O General purpose I/O
AC11 P0.16 Digital I/O General purpose I/O
AC13 P0.18 nRESET Digital I/O General purpose I/O QSPI/CSN
AC15 P0.19 Digital I/O General purpose I/O QSPI/SCK
AC17 P0.21 Digital I/O General purpose I/O QSPI
AC19 P0.23 Digital I/O General purpose I/O QSPI
AC21 P0.25 Digital I/O General purpose I/O
AC24 SWDIO Debug Serial wire debug I/O
AD2 VBUS Power 5 V input for USB 3.3 V regulator
AD4 D- Digital I/O USB D- USB
AD6 D+ Digital I/O USB D+ USB
AD8 P0.13 Digital I/O General purpose I/O
AD10 P0.15 Digital I/O General purpose I/O
AD12 P0.17 Digital I/O General purpose I/O
AD14 VDD Power Power supply
AD16 P0.20 Digital I/O General purpose I/O
AD18 P0.22 (AD20) Digital I/O General purpose I/O QSPI
AD22 P1.00 Digital I/O General purpose I/O QSPI
AD23 VDD Power Power supply

E73-2G4M08S1C Pinout

E73-2G4M08S1C Pinout

E73-2G4M08S1C Size

E73-2G4M08S1C Photo

E73-2G4M08S1C Schematic

Alternative modules

See Components#alternative-modules for prices and links to IPEX antennas and stuff.

E73-2G4M08S1CX

E73-2G4M08S1CX schematic (with the IPEX antenna) is IDENTICAL. Does not need an extra XTAL or anything.

E73-2G4M08S1E

nRF52833-based (half the Flash, so no Python). Lacks pin 1.11 so it's not 100% compatible. Also no DCCH so DC-DC mode.

Other changes for nRF52833 module is that 1.10 is now 0.25 (blue led) and 1.13 is now 1.05 (standard gpio).

pinout-comp

Since pad 1 - P1.11 is NC - Not Connected on E73-2G4M08S1E, you can add a connection from P1.04 to P1.11:

image

So it would still need PCB mod (or a wire jumper) and a firmware patch (there's also too little Flash). ZMK support was added just recently.

Power Pins

nRF52840 supports Normal and High Voltage power supply modes. The latter is either internal LDO or internal DC-DC.

  • Normal mode uses VDD pin (shorted with VDDH pin). It's usually powered via an external LDO (1.8-3.6V).
  • HV Mode with internal LDO uses VDDH only (1.8-5.5V), sets 1.8V core voltage (3.3V with UICR_REGOUT0_VOUT_3V3).
  • HV Mode with internal DC-DC uses VDDH pin and 10uH on DCCH and VDD (enable with BOARD_ENABLE_DCDC_HV).

image

If you don't want to add 10uH inductor you can use internal LDO and leave DCCH and VDD pins hanging. Using the internal DCDC is better when you have high current draws, such as the radio TX current spikes. We don't need that if we power high current components (OLED/RGB) separately (via a separate power bus). Note that internal regulators only support up to 25 mA.

  • USB won't power up the board from a single VUSB pin, you also have to supply power to the core using methods above.
  • Some Nordic products (e.g. nRF52833) have no DC-DC and no DCCH pin so you're limited to internal LDO and VDD.
  • Some modules (e.g. Holyot YJ-18010) don't route out existing DCCH and VDDH pins, so you're limited to VDD.

nRFMicro 1.4 historically uses VDD (external LDO), but it's a subject to change for the future versions.

References