I am 100% new to Arduino. I just purchased the Adafruit ARDX - v1.3 Experimentation Kit for Arduino (Uno R3) - v1.3. The directions state to mount the arduino board onto the acrylic board, BUT the nut is too large to secure next to the power in. Page 02 of the included guided suggests that a screw with 2 nuts (one on bottom of arduino and one on top) should be placed in the bottom right hand corner of board. If I try to secure the second nut on top of the board, it hits the power in and will actually start to flex the screw and I am unable to tighten it fully. My questions are...
1) What am I doing wrong?
2) Is there a design flaw with the directions or board?
3) Did I receive the wrong size nut?
Thank you for your help and patience.
Arduino (Uno R3) - v1.3 VS acrylic board
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- adafruit2
- Posts: 22149
- Joined: Fri Mar 11, 2005 7:36 pm
Re: Arduino (Uno R3) - v1.3 VS acrylic board
if you can't tighten it, that means its attached well!
- Novel_Lifter
- Posts: 3
- Joined: Sun Nov 27, 2016 1:00 pm
Re: Arduino (Uno R3) - v1.3 VS acrylic board
Thank your for the reply admin. But I can't tighten it because the nut literally will not thread or turn since it hits the power in. In the picture, it is just resting on top, not threaded. Although new to arduino, I have mastered the art of threading a nut on a screw. Any more suggestions?
- Franklin97355
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- Joined: Mon Apr 21, 2008 2:33 pm
Re: Arduino (Uno R3) - v1.3 VS acrylic board
You could cut the nut so it fits and then unthread the screw until the nut is against the board and then thread the bolt back in turning the bolt rather than the nuts.
- Novel_Lifter
- Posts: 3
- Joined: Sun Nov 27, 2016 1:00 pm
Re: Arduino (Uno R3) - v1.3 VS acrylic board
I will try that. Thank you!
- frank23
- Posts: 5
- Joined: Fri Mar 03, 2017 9:55 pm
Re: Arduino (Uno R3) - v1.3 VS acrylic board
For what it's worth, I had the same experience with the size of the 4-40 nut relative to the power connector that its mounting location is adjacent to. As a workaround, I stacked the nut, the Arduino, the second nut and the acrylic plate together, and then very carefully inserted the 4-40 x 0.5" screw through all four of them in one go. This took a couple of tries, but I was able to get a secure fit given that the topmost nut was unable to turn given its position next to the power connector. This didn't require cutting the nut.
Please be positive and constructive with your questions and comments.