Teensy 4.0
Teensy 4.0
$35.69CAD
Teensy 4.0 is the latest Teensy, offering the fastest
microcontroller and powerful peripherals in the Teensy 1.4 by 0.7 inch
form factor. It features an ARM Cortex-M7 processor at 600MHz, with a
NXP iMXRT1062 chip, the fastest microcontroller available today. Teensy
4.0 is the same size and shape as Teensy 3.2, and retains compatibility
with most of the pin functions on Teensy 3.2.
When running at 600 MHz, Teensy 4.0 consumes approximately 100mA
current. Teensy 4.0 provides support for dynamic clock scaling. Unlike
traditional microcontrollers, where changing the clock speed causes
wrong baud rates and other issues, Teensy 4.0 hardware and Teensyduino's
software support for Arduino timing functions are designed to allow
dynamically speed changes. Serial baud rates, audio streaming sample
rates, and Arduino functions like delay() and millis(), and
Teensyduino's extensions like IntervalTimer and elapsedMillis, continue
to work properly while the CPU changes speed. Teensy 4.0 also provides a
power shut off feature. By connecting a pushbutton to the On/Off pin,
the 3.3V power supply can be completely disabled by holding the button
for 5 seconds, and turned back on by a brief button press. If a coin
cell is connected to VBAT, Teensy 4.0's RTC also continues to keep track
of date & time while the power is off. Teensy 4.0 also can also be
overclocked, well beyond 600MHz!
The ARM Cortex-M7 brings many powerful CPU features to a true
real-time microcontroller platform. Cortex-M7 is a dual-issue
superscaler processor, meaning the M7 can execute two instructions per
clock cycle, at 600MHz! Of course, executing two simultaneously depends
upon the compiler ordering instructions and registers. Initial
benchmarks have shown C++ code compiled by Arduino tends to achieve two
instructions about 40% to 50% of the time while performing numerically
intensive work using integers and pointers. Cortex-M7 is the first ARM
microcontroller to use branch prediction. On M4, loops and other code
which much branch take three clock cycles. With M7, after a loop has
executed a few times, the branch prediction removes that overhead,
allowing the branch instruction to run in only a single clock cycle.
Tightly Coupled Memory is a special feature which allows Cortex-M7
fast single cycle access to memory using a pair of 64 bit wide buses.
The ITCM bus provides a 64 bit path to fetch instructions. The DTCM bus
is actually a pair of 32 bit paths, allowing M7 to perform up to two
separate memory accesses in the same cycle. These extremely high speed
buses are separate from M7's main AXI bus, which accesses other memory
and peripherals. 512K of memory can be accessed as tightly coupled
memory. Teensyduino automatically allocates your Arduino sketch code
into ITCM and all non-malloc memory use to the fast DTCM, unless you add
extra keywords to override the optimized default. Memory not accessed
on the tightly coupled buses is optimized for DMA access by peripherals.
Because the bulk of M7's memory access is done on the two tightly
coupled buses, powerful DMA-based peripherals have excellent access to
the non-TCM memory for highly efficient I/O.
Teensy 4.0's Cortex-M7 processor includes a floating point unit (FPU)
which supports both 64 bit "double" and 32 bit "float". With M4's FPU
on Teensy 3.5 & 3.6, and also Atmel SAMD51 chips, only 32 bit float
is hardware accelerated. Any use of double, double functions like log(),
sin(), cos() means slow software implemented math. Teensy 4.0 executes
all of these with FPU hardware.
Note: Please be aware that the Teensy 4.0 does not include headers and will need to be purchased separately and soldered on yourself.
Features:
- ARM Cortex-M7 at 600MHz
- 1024K RAM (512K is tightly coupled)
- 2048K Flash (64K reserved for recovery & EEPROM emulation)
- 2 USB ports, both 480MBit/sec
- 3 CAN Bus (1 with CAN FD)
- 2 I2S Digital Audio
- 1 S/PDIF Digital Audio
- 1 SDIO (4 bit) native SD
- 3 SPI, all with 16 word FIFO
- 3 I2C, all with 4 byte FIFO
- 7 Serial, all with 4 byte FIFO
- 32 general purpose DMA channels
- 31 PWM pins
- 40 digital pins, all interrrupt capable
- 14 analog pins, 2 ADCs on chip
- Cryptographic Acceleration
- Random Number Generator
- RTC for date/time
- Programmable FlexIO
- Pixel Processing Pipeline
- Peripheral cross triggering
- Power On/Off management
Documents:
- Datasheet (MIMXRT1062 DVL6A)
- Manual (MIMXRT1062 DVL6A)
- Datasheet (W25Q16JV-DTR)
- Teensy Quick Start
- Teensyduino Software
- Pin Assignment Charts
- Teensy Help Page and FAQ
X2 Robotics © 2024. All Rights Reserved.