What's better than a single LED? Lots of LEDs! A fun way to make a small linear display is to use two 12-bar Bi-color bar-graphs. Wouldn't it be awesome if you could control a colorful bargraph without tons of wiring? That's where this LED bar-graph backpack comes in. Much like Adafruit's 8x8 and 7-segment backpacks, this backpack pairs perfectly with our bar-graphs and manages all the LED control and multiplexing.
The backpack uses a driver chip that does all the heavy lifting for you: It has a built in clock so it can multiplex the display. It uses constant-current drivers for ultra-bright, consistent color, 1/16 step display dimming, all via a simple I2C interface. The backpack comes with address-selection jumpers so you can connect up to eight of these bar-graphs on a single I2C bus. You can also mix-and-match the bar-graph breakout with our other types of I2C LED backpacks.
The product kit comes with:
- A fully tested and assembled LED backpack stick
- Two 12-bar bi-color bar-graphs
- 4-pin header
A bit of soldering is required to attach the matrix onto the backpack but its very easy to do and only takes about 5 minutes.
Of course, in classic Adafruit fashion, they have a detailed tutorial showing you how to solder, wire and control the display. They even wrote a very nice library for the backpacks so you can get running in under half an hour, displaying images on the matrix or numbers on the 7-segment. If you've been eyeing matrix displays but hesitated because of the complexity, this is the solution you've been looking for!
Technical Details
- Bargraph Dimensions: 10mm x 30mm ( 0.4" x 1.2")
- 7mm (0.3") thick
- Lots more LED details including dimensions, pinouts, etc in the datasheet, this is the Common-Cathode model KWL-R1230CDUGB
- Board Dimensions: 13mm x 101mm (.5" x 4")
Datasheets, schematic, EagleCAD PCB files, and Fritzing available in the product tutorial