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- t***c (178)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseLovely item, as described. Excellent communication. Parcel arrived well packaged. Thank you :-)
- i***i (2417)- Feedback left by buyer.Past 6 monthsVerified purchaseAs expected Thankyou
- eBay automated Feedback- Feedback left by buyer.Past 6 monthsOrder completed successfully – tracked and on time
- eBay automated Feedback- Feedback left by buyer.Past 6 monthsThis seller successfully completed an order.
- *****- Feedback left by buyer.Past 6 monthsVerified purchaseQuick response and fast payment. Perfect! THANKS!!
- ****g (4278)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseReally well packed and lightning post, many thanks!
Reviews (10)

18 Dec, 2019
Great for bare-metal programming
Arduino Due are brilliant little single-board computers. Powered by an 80MHz Atmel ARM Cortex M3 core there is plenty of grunt available for a whole host of applications. The Arduino community have created a nice IDE to ease programming for the beginner. Alternatively if you are an experienced software engineer the GNU compiler toolchain supports the processor and for a small outlay there are a number of industrial-grade development IDEs. However, this is NOT a Raspberry Pi! There is no nice native Linux-based operating system to fall back on with a host of tools. The flash and RAM allocations are generous for a microcontroller but limited compared to a Raspberry Pi. On the other hand bare-metal programming is well-supported, the I/O documentation is copious (unlike a Raspberry Pi) and the MCU documentation is first-class from ARM and Atmel. While there are plenty of interfacing options there are no on-board goodies like accelerometers, wifi etc.,. As an alternative that is well-stocked check out the ESP32 devices. The downside with them is the development tools are not mature and the documentation is a bit thin. Still, if bare-metal programming (or you want to integrate FreeRTOS) is your bag and you like creating device-drivers then check out the Arduino Due.

24 Oct, 2018
One-for-one replacement
Not a good feeling when the power supply for your laptop dies after six and a half years. Watching
the battery slowly empty while pulling the last important blocks of work off. Was quite worried that
no replacement or a shonky one was the fate in store. No problem though! These guys had loads of genuine Delta replacement psus for a very reasonable price delivered in almost no time.
Plugged it in and we are back in business!

15 Sep, 2021
Great for the price
ThinkOBD is a small, light unit for car diagnostics. It has a good length cable to plug into a cars' OBD-II connector; you can comfortably sit in the drivers' seat while using it. It is powered from the OBD-II connector, no batteries required. Operating it is easy, just a couple of large up/down buttons, a selector button and a return button. The display is small but very clear. On selecting the diagnostic option the unit quickly returns the status and any error codes. The one limitation is the code database only covers the "standard" codes. Other vehicle codes are detected but need to be decoded for further information using another source e.g. manufacturer's databases. A micro USB A/B port and cable are provided for future updates.