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XBee S1 User Manual

XBee S1
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The focus of this tutorial is to explain how to use an XBee Explorer with an XBee. There are a variety of Explorer boards, all designed to
achieve the same purpose: to create a communication gateway between your computer and the XBee.
The Explorers: USB Explorer, Explorer Dongle, and Serial Explorer.
With an XBee Explorer connected between your computer and your XBee, and with the help of the X-CTU software, you can easily
configure XBees, test connections, and pass data between your computer and remote XBees. We're going to show you how to do all of
that in this tutorial!
Materials Required
XBees are really only useful if you have at least a pair of them. They need buddies to talk to! Hence, there's a lot of "2x" in this list of
materials. To follow along with this tutorial, you will need the following materials. You may not need everything though depending on what
you have. Add it to your cart, read through the guide, and adjust the cart as necessary.
2x XBees -- XBees exist in a variety of series, frequencies, and ranges. If you're just getting started with XBee, we highly
recommend going with Series 1 (or Series 3 configured with the 802.15.4 protocol) models with a built-in antenna -- either with a
trace antenna, wire antenna. You can also get one with a u.fl connector but you will need to get the appropriate external antenna.
For more help picking an XBee, check out our XBee Buying Guide.
2x Explorers -- either the Explorer USB, Explorer USB Dongle, or Explorer Serial.
These boards act as an interface between your computer and an XBee. They're used to configure your XBee and pass data to
and from your computer.
Depending on which explorer you have, you may also need a matching mini-B USB or serial cables.
At least one computer with X-CTU installed.
The latest version of X-CTU is available for both Mac and Windows!
Suggested Reading
Don't know what XBees to start with? Try checking out our buying guide to compare the different modules.
XBee Buying Guide -- We highly recommend Series 1 XBee's, if this is your first time playing with them. If you're curious about other
XBee classes, check out this guide!
This tutorial builds on some lower-level electronics concepts. If you're not familiar with the subjects below, we recommend checking out
those tutorials first.
Serial Communication -- XBee's communicate over a serial port. This tutorial will get you familiar with terms like "RX", "TX", "baud
rates", "stop bits", and "parity".
Serial Terminal Basics -- The X-CTU software we'll use has an integrated serial terminal called the "console". You can use your
preferred terminal instead; if you don't have a preferred serial terminal, check out this tutorial.
How to Install FTDI Drivers -- If you are using an FTDI to connect to the XBees, you'll need to install the appropriate drivers.
Hexadecimal -- XBee configuration settings -- like addresses and network ID's -- are all programmed in hex. Base 16. If you don't
know how to make numbers with 0-9 and A-F, check out this tutorial.
Serial Communication
Asynchronous serial communication concepts: packets, signal levels, baud rates, UARTs and more!
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How to Install FTDI Drivers
How to install drivers for the FTDI Basic on Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux.
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XBee S1 Specifications

General IconGeneral
BrandXBee
ModelS1
CategoryControl Unit
LanguageEnglish