The Texas Instruments ADS1015 +/-24V Analog Digital Converter is a 2 x 1.5mm integrated circuit implemented by both AdaFruit and Pimoroni as I2C-compatible breakout boards (Pimoroni's is a "Breakout Garden" board). It can be used to measure an analog voltage between -24V DC to +24V DC, returning a value with 12 bit precision.
The ADS1015 has four channels (labeled A0, A1, A2 and A3) that can read voltages from -24V to +24V at sampling rates up to 3.3KHz with a 12-bit resolution. The Pimoroni board only provides three of these channels as usable pins.
The thumbnail image to the right is roughly the size of the Adafruit and Pimoroni boards, which measure 28 x 17mm and 24 x 21mm respectively. As of January 2020 the price of the AdaFruit board is US$9 (~NZ$14), the price of the Pimoroni board is £12 (~NZ$24). The Adafruit board is also available from DigiKey NZ at NZ$16.57.
You'll need Python and pip (or pip3 for Python 3) already installed.
If you're using Python 2, just run:
sudo pip install ads1015For Python 3, use:
sudo pip3 install ads1015
The board has three input pins, labeled A0, A1 and A2. Plugging a signal into A0, here's an example of some code to repeatedly read the voltage on the pin until you type Ctrl-C:
#!/usr/bin/env python3 import time from ads1015 import ADS1015 print('''read-all.py - read the A0 input of the ADC. Press Ctrl+C to exit! ''') CHANNEL = 'in0/ref' ads1015 = ADS1015() ads1015.set_mode('single') ads1015.set_programmable_gain(2.048) ads1015.set_sample_rate(1600) reference = ads1015.get_reference_voltage() print("Reference voltage: {:6.3f}v \n".format(reference)) try: while True: value = ads1015.get_compensated_voltage(channel=CHANNEL, reference_voltage=reference) print("A0 value: {:6.3f}v".format(value)) time.sleep(0.5) except KeyboardInterrupt: pass