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This Arduino library adds the basic functionality needed to drive a HUB 75 protocol LED Panel up to 64x32 Pixels RGB.

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HUB75nano

This Arduino library can be used to drive a HUB75 protocol LED Panel up to 64x32 Pixels RGB (tested with 64x32 and 32x16). It can also drive HUB75E type panels (icnd2153, stp1612pw05, FM6124C or similar chips) in 128x64 pixel resolutions (tested only with that size, but it should work with smaller panels as well)

It can display colors up to 8 bit colors for a full screen, a 1 or 2 bit rgb image buffer (dynamic) or 4 bit rgb buffers (static). It was originally written for the Arduino Nano (It should also work with the Arduino Uno), but is now being ported to a number of other chips in the nano formfactor (or with similar architecture). Refer to the list below for the current state of support.

Setup

Clone or download the archive and put it inside your Arduino IDE custom library folder.

Then just put #import <HUB75nano.h> and everything should work.

You can use these macros to configure the library and your desired modes

/////////////////////
// ######## THE FOLLOWING WORK REGARDLESS OF PANEL TYPE
// #define PANEL_BIG // use 2 bit rgb image buffer
// #define PANEL_FLASH // 4 bit flash buffer
// #define PANEL_NO_BUFFER // no buffer, immediate mode only
// #define PANEL_NO_FONT // disables everything font related, saves some flash
// #define PANEL_MAX_SPEED // uses more space but is faster, usually not needed
// #define PANEL_FLIP_VERTICAL // flips the panel vertically (in flash mode it flips the upper and lower half, but doesnt flip the whole panel)
// #define PANEL_FLIP_HORIZONTAL // flips the panel horizontally
// #define PANEL_X 64 // width in pixels
// #define PANEL_Y 32 // panel height in pixels
// #define PANEL_MAX_FRAMETIME 127 // shades all colors, should be one of these (255, 127, 63, 31, 15, 7)
// #define PANEL_3_PIN_ROWS // swaps the row addressing in 5(binary) to 3 pins(shift register)
// #define PANEL_HUB75E // switches output to a format compatible with most 128x64 flex panels (chips: icnd2153, stp1612pw05, FM6124C or similar)
// ######## ONLY WHEN IN THE HUB75E MODE:
// #define PANEL_SMALL_BRIGHT // gets the image muuuuch brighter on the hub75e 1 bit buffer at the cost of some slight ghosting
// #define PANEL_HIGH_RES // changes the size from effective 64x32 on the hub7e 128x64 panels to a full 64x64
// #define PANEL_GPIO_NON_INTRUSIVE // this saves the other pins on GPIOB on the nano and other smaller boards in hub75e mode
/////////////////////

Pinout/Connection reference

HUB75 Pinout

This is a pin description for the HUB75 connector on the panels. The file in the "additional documentation" folder also contains a mapping for directly soldering to a 16pin flat cable The corresponding pins on the arduino are as follows:

Pin mapping

Connector Nano Every Mega2560 UNO R4 MINIMA def. name function
A A0 11 22 11 RA First/Least significant row bit
B A1 12 23 12 RB Second row bit
C A2 13 24 13 RC Third row bit (needed for Panels with 9+ rows)
D A3 8 25 10 RD Fourth/Most significant row bit (needed for panels with 17+ rows)
E A4 2 26 8 RE (Only needed for Panels with 33+ rows)
R1 2 A3 47 A5 RF Set red LED on upper half
G1 3 A2 46 A4 GF Set green LED on upper half
B1 4 A1 45 5 BF Set blue LED on upper half
R2 5 A0 44 4 RS Set red LED on lower half
G2 6 A6 43 3 GS Set green LED on lower half
B2 7 A7 42 2 BS Set blue LED on lower half
CLK 9 9 37 A1 CLK Shifts the data on rising edge
LAT 10 10 36 A2 LAT Latches the data from the shift registers to the LED drivers
OE 11 5 35 A3 OE Enables the output of the LED drivers
GND GND GND GND GND - Ground reference

Connector refers to the HUB75 input connector on the panel. The pin names for the Arduino are the ones printed on the pcb.

You can deviate from this mapping but it comes at a speed cost. To use your own pins, refer to the table above (def. name coloumn) and just define the pin to one you like.

Example: #define RA 12 This puts the first row bit on D12 instead of A0.

Supported Arduino boards

✅: Fully supported and tested  
❌: Not yet supported, some maybe never will be supported
🅿️ : Support in progress 
Ⓜ️ : Maybe works, should in theory (probably needs a custom pin assignment)

5V boards, work just like that

board chip operating voltage supported
Arduino Nano ATmega328(p) 5V
Arduino Pro Mini ATmega328(p) 5V ✅ (pinout is the same as nano)
Arduino Uno R3 Atmega328p 5V Ⓜ️
Arduino Uno WiFi Rev2 ATmega4809 5V Ⓜ️
Arduino Uno R4 Minima Renesas RA4M1 5V
Arduino Uno R4 WiFi Renesas RA4M1 5V Ⓜ️ (pinout different than minima)
Arduino Nano Every ATMega4809 5V
Arduino Mega ATmega2560 5V

3.3V boards, usually need level shifters

You can use a dedicated shield like this or build one out of jumper wires and the adafruit(or similar) shifters for example.

board chip operating voltage supported shield
Arduino Nano 33 IOT Arm® Cortex®-M0 32-bit SAMD21 3.3V 🅿️ nano33IOTShield still WIP
Arduino Nano 33 BLE (Sense/Sense Rev2) nRF52840 3.3V -
Arduino Nano Esp32 u-blox® NORA-W106 3.3V -
Arduino Nano RP2040 Connect Raspberry Pi RP2040 3.3V 🅿️ -

Examples

This library also contains some examples on how to use it. The examples all are functioning arduino sketches ending with *.ino.

How the library works internally

A writeup on very very early stages of development is here.

Limitations:

voltage issues

  • when running more than 800 LEDs on full white, the color starts to deterioate quickly. this happens because the blue LEDs need more voltage to run than the others, therefore it turns into an orange color. You can get more white LEDs when running them in coloumns (max about 25*31) than rows (63*23). With full white rows it starts to turn orange at about 4 to 5 rows. this can be helped by overvolting the panel supply voltage to above 5V, but it is not recommended. Tests have shown 6 full rows of white at 5.7V and no rows at 4.6V.

No Panel Chaining really supported yet, is planned