We’ve previously covered to health related boards from Protocentral with HealthPi Raspberry Pi HAT measuring vitals signs, and HeartyPatch open source ECG patch powered by an ESP32 WiSoC.

Today, I’ll write about another of their board – Sensything -, not directly related to health applications, but designed for multiple sensor’s analog and digital (I2C, GPIO) data acquisition, and designed around Espressif Systems ESP32 WiFi & Bluetooth SoC.

Sensything specifications:

SiP- Espressif Systems ESP32-PICO-D4 system-in-package with 4MB Flash, Texas Instruments ADS1220 ADC

Wireless Connectivity 2.4 GHz WiFi with on-board PCB antenna, support for Station and Access Point (AP) modes Bluetooth 4.2 / Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE)

USB – 1x micro USB port with FT230X (USB-CDC)

Expansion I/O: Board-edge alligator clip compatible analog input connectors 2x Sparkfun Qwiic-compatible I2C ports 4x general-purpose I/O pins

Analog Input details 4 channels single-ended, 2-channel fully differential Full-scale input range: ± 2.048 V to ± 0.016 V (adjustable gain) Sampling rate: 20 samples/second (SPS) to 2000 SPS Current sources: On-board excitation current sources adjustable from 10 uA to 1500 uA Built-in 2.048 V voltage reference with 5 ppm/°C drift Built-in temperature sensor with 0.5°C accuracy

Misc – 1x WS2812 RGB user-controllable LED

Power Supply: Li-ion battery (3.7 V, 1000 mAh) with on-board USB battery charger 5V DC/DC boost converter with low-noise LDO for analog power 3.3 V digital supply voltage

Dimensions – 47×57 mm; height: 5 mm (board only), 12 mm with included battery stacked

The board support three operating modes:

Simple Acquisition Through BLE – The default (pre-loaded) program reads all four channels of the ADC and sends data through BLE to an Android app as shown in the photo above.

– The default (pre-loaded) program reads all four channels of the ADC and sends data through BLE to an Android app as shown in the photo above. Wi-Fi Access Point Mode – Using another firmware, you can configure the board to as an access point, as access sensor data over a Web interface accessible from your local network (no cloud or internet connection involved).

– Using another firmware, you can configure the board to as an access point, as access sensor data over a Web interface accessible from your local network (no cloud or internet connection involved). Developer mode – You can write programs with the Arduino IDE or using the ESP-IDF, and upload the resulting binary through the on-board USB-UART chip.

The board will apparently be open source, but I can’t find anything yet about Sensything on ProtoCentral’s github account. They did release hardware and firmware for their previous two boards however, so that’s probably just a question of time.



Sensything board launched on Crowd Supply a little while ago, and pledges start at $49 for an early-bird board without battery, nor cables, but if you’d like a readyto-use kit, then the Basic Kit with Sensything board, a 1,000 mAH LiPo battery, then 2-ended alligator clip leads , and microUSB cable for charging and programming is offered for $75. You’d still need your own sensor though. Shipping is free to the US, and $15 to the rest of the world. You should expect your reward around the end of November, and while ProtoCentral is based in India, all boards and kits will ship from Crowd Supply’s headquarters in the US.