Hasan Baig said: I need to know is there any development board available for MSP430 Wolverine series. At the moment only appears to be the MSP-TS430RGZ48C - MSP430 48-pin FRAM Target Board (or MSP430 48-pin FRAM Developer's Kit which is a MSP-TS430RGZ48C…
Hi Danilo,
I used the FR5969 Launchpad (MSP-EXP430FR5969) which does not have this additional connection like the MSP-TS430RGZ48C target board to do another test. I had no issue when simply connecting TCK on the FET tool to TEST/SBWTCK on the MSP430 …
Hi Luis,
The device I am using is MSP430FR5969 TI 44I F AEV1 G4.
I have tried various different timing for the pin states and several devices. I am using the MSP-TS430RGZ48C board for development.
Below is a screen shot of the BSL entry sequence. Trace…
Other Parts Discussed in Thread: MSP-TS430RGZ48C , MSP430FR5969 I am using the demo board MSP-TS430RGZ48C with a MSP430FR5969 and the debugger MSP-FET430UIF . For programming the device, I use the last IAR version (5.51.3). When I place the Jumper JP3, JP4…
Other Parts Discussed in Thread: MSP-TS430RGZ48C , MSP430FR5969 , MSP430G2553 Hello,
I have written a very simple code built on top of the blinking led example code included in CCS v5.3.0.00090. It creates a global char array with the string "Hello World…
Other Parts Discussed in Thread: MSP430FR5969 , MSPWARE , MSP-TS430RGZ48C , MSPDS , MSP430G2955 , MSP430F5528 Hi
I already posted it here http://e2e.ti.com/support/microcontrollers/msp430/f/166/p/253851/888698.aspx#888698
but I think this is a tool problem…
Other Parts Discussed in Thread: MSP-EXP430FR5739 , MSP-TS430RGZ48C , MSP430FR5969 Have you considered an Fram Launchpad? I think it would be very popular with the hobby/educational crowd. I have several potential projects that need the write sped and RTC…
Other Parts Discussed in Thread: MSP-TS430RGZ48C , CC1120 , MSP430FR5969 Has anyone used the clock system on the new Wolverine sample chip? I have got my MCLK / SMCLK running at 8 MHz successfully, but the crystal for ACLK appears to be running at 38.4 kHz…
Hi Timothy,
In PCB design, DNP is an industry standard acronym standing for "Do Not Place". This is an instruction for those manufacturing the board, that while there are pads here for this component, not to populate it. The reason it is not populated…