
- #Rv control panel with raspberry pi install
- #Rv control panel with raspberry pi full
- #Rv control panel with raspberry pi portable
- #Rv control panel with raspberry pi tv
So, in a typical 12" x 6" panel, there are 64 pixels across by 32 pixels down, totaling 2,048 pixels! That's plenty of pixels for text and animations. The "5" in P5 means that pixels are spaced 5mm apart.

There are three LEDs per "pixel", the colors mixing together to form a single color of light. They are easy to setup and instantly rewarding you can display anything on them including text, animations, and video.Ī P5 panel has multi-color LEDs arranged in a grid on a rectangular base. P5 panels are a good way to get into the world of LEDs and pixels. Self contained (via included mounting bracket and cover).Animations and graphics created on your laptop/computer with xLights, then uploaded wirelessly to the display.Displays static text/graphics, moving text, and animations.Battery powered using an internal rechargeable battery (also runs from a wall outlet).Wifi controllable from your smart phone or laptop (built-in wifi "hotspot").Great for a tabletop display for trade/craft shows, displaying eye catching information, and anywhere that benefits from a bright, colorful display.
#Rv control panel with raspberry pi full
Full color, high resolution LED display (2,048 pixels).It uses a "P5" LED panel that is controlled by a Raspberry Pi Zero W.
#Rv control panel with raspberry pi portable
The router is running a customized version of DD-WRT and behind the firewall I have 2 playstations, 2 Apple TVs, 1 Mac Mini (media server), a network hard drive (media server) three Macbooks three iphones and three ipads."Colossus Micro" is an animated light display in a portable size.
#Rv control panel with raspberry pi install
Power for everything will (shortly) be coming from about 1100 watts of solar as soon as I get a chance to install it. In addition to the other devices, I have an internet enabled thermostat for my front roof air that tells me the indoor AND outdoor temperatures (if it knows where I am) and I will likely be adding an internet-enabled weather center later this year. I have unlimited service so one single power cable (which will be a 12v-19v converter at some point) creates my private hotspot as soon as it is plugged in. What makes this interesting is that wherever I am with that router, I have internet b/c the other port is a USB cable to an iphone. I think the ATV might be running ads via ip address, Google has been known to pull that crap with their other mobile app ad networks. My primary goal is blocking all ads on the streaming services, and Pihole does a decent job with most but the logging leaves something to be desired.
#Rv control panel with raspberry pi tv
I have an Asus router powering a Rpi3 on the back of it (it has 2 USB ports) and I'm running Pihole on the Rpi for my Apple TV devices since I can't (yet) jailbreak them or really have a reason to. I had to move to Odroid from PI because even with a PI3, the miniDLNA server would occasionally drag when streaming. None of the TODOs have happened because I tell myself I'll work on it when I'm out camping, but I have too much fun just hanging out. VPN back home: to get home home resources and put an IP phone in the camper tied into my home PBX. If you know those two, you can completely deduce battery capacity and overall health. People can chew through some data.īattery monitoring: Measuring the voltage of the house batteries and I have an idea to measure current consumed. Not a problem when I connect to a park WIFI, but sometimes I have to connect to my phone in WIFI hotspot mode. I have the whole thing setup on the house batteries, so when we are rolling down the road even though the pi isn't forwarding internet because the Bullet isn't connected to any wifi, the "main network" is still up and the kids can stream movies while rolling down the road.īandwidth management: We camp with a group of people (3 other trailers) and everybody uses my wifi.

I also have a WIFI access point in the camper where basically, most everything connects to. I also run a minidlna server which serves up movies or music on rainy days. The pi is a NAT and firewall so everything in the camper can share the single connection to the office or other wifi source.

The "big bad internet" actually lives on a VLAN. In Texas, only the park ranger's office has WIFI or maybe the camp store, so it's out of range for most devices over in campsites. From there, I can usually find any wifi in the area and join it. Since the bullet is powered by Power over Ethernet, there's only a single cable to run. I keep a long piece of galvanized pipe tucked into the frame of the camper, and I can slip the bullet & antenna over the end of the pipe and stand it up against the camper and get the bullet and antenna up 15 or 20 feet in the air. The Bullet M2 has a nice high gain antenna ( similar to this) on it. I had a raspberry pi (Moved to Odroid) in my Travel Trailer.
