Difference between revisions of "Bluetooth Strain Gauge"
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| Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
To remove the binding: | To remove the binding: | ||
rfcomm release /dev/rfcomm1 | rfcomm release /dev/rfcomm1 | ||
| + | |||
| + | It now appears as a serial connection, and you can use fopen() and fscanf() to read in data to MATLAB: | ||
| + | example: | ||
| + | instrreset; | ||
| + | s = serial('/dev/rfcomm1', 'BaudRate', 115200); | ||
| + | fopen(s); | ||
| + | data = fscanf(s); %read | ||
| + | disp(data); | ||
| + | fclose(s); | ||
Revision as of 13:41, 30 October 2017
Notes for setting up the Bluetooth strain gauge (RN42-0452) with e.g. MATLAB:
In terminal (you may have to manually switch on your bluetooth connection)
- Scan for devices:
hcitool scan
Look for the MAC-ADDRESS and copy it into the following <MAC> This will bind the device to the name /dev/rfcomm1:
(sudo) rfcomm bind /dev/rfcomm1 <MAC>
Afterwards, check if it has been bound:
rfcomm -a
To remove the binding:
rfcomm release /dev/rfcomm1
It now appears as a serial connection, and you can use fopen() and fscanf() to read in data to MATLAB: example:
instrreset;
s = serial('/dev/rfcomm1', 'BaudRate', 115200);
fopen(s);
data = fscanf(s); %read
disp(data);
fclose(s);