Using the DIYPNP Proto Areas

The DIYPNP has one proto area on the main
board, and some versions have additional proto space on the
adapter board. The holes in these proto areas are interconnected
to make building circuits easier; connected holes are indicated
by white dots in between the holes. These proto areas give
you room to build model specific circuits your application may
need, or just to get creative and try out new circuits. Here,
we'll show you a couple examples of circuits you may find useful
on certain cars. It's also possible to make circuits in the
proto area for applications such as nitrous control, EGT
logging, speed sensor inputs - the possibilities are only
limited by the code and your imagination.

This picture shows the connections on
the proto area on the main board in blue-green lines. The
N42 board has similar, extra proto areas on it for even more
circuitry if you should happen to need it. We have also
provided a strip of grounds alongside the proto area
connected to the main (not sensor) ground plane. The two
holes marked 3 and 4 in the proto area connect to the holes
marked 3 and 4 above the Inj2 header.
Here is an example of an add-on circuit you
might use the proto area for: A voltage regulator circuit for
'99-'00 Miatas. This circuit has been passed around on Miata
forums for a while and we believe it was originally designed by
Jason Cuadra. We've modified it to fit the DIYPNP proto area.
Click on the picture for a larger view. This circuit requires a
switched 12V input, ground, and connection of the circuit's
output to the "Field" terminal. Switched 12V can be taken from one of the three
12V terminals on the DIYPNP mainboard, ground can be used from
the terminal just above the Proto Area, and the "Field" output
can be jumpered to the connector board.
Here's another circuit possibility: Stepper IAC control. The
MicroSquirt Module can do this with 3.0.3 or higher MS2/Extra
code. This is a through hole version of the MS2's built in
stepper driver circuit.

To use this circuit, you'll need the
through hole version of the UDN2916; it can be ordered from Digi-Key
as part number 620-1118-ND. Connect IAC1IN to PT6, IAC2IN to
PT7, and IAC_ENBL to PB4, and you can use the four outputs to
drive a stepper motor. Note that if you use this circuit, you
give up sequential injection.

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