Every family produces some waste that is suitable for composting. Our family uses a Biolan fast composting unit to convert that stuff eventually to soil. This is very easy to do during summertime, but in winter when the temperature drops below -15 °C it becomes a much harder job. Too many times have I found myself witnessing the unit in condition where inside temperature is near zero or even below it. After that it is very hard to get it working again before warm spring days come to fix the situation.
To provide some tools to avoid this I figured that it might be a good idea to put a temperature monitoring device into the composting unit. Ideally this would be a small device with radio, batteries and temperature sensor in waterproof box that I could throw into unit. Based on these requirements, Texas Instruments MSP430 CPU seemed like an obvious choice.
I really didn’t have much knowledge about MSP430 before this project so I ordered ez430-RF2500 development kit, which contains two MSP430F2270 boards with 2.4Ghz radio and internal temperature sensor. I used these boards to develop a port of Pico]OS for MSP430 and to test Simpliciti (a Texas Instruments radio stack). Creating Pico]OS port for the cpu was remarkably easy as the architecture is not at all too complex. Simpliciti stack required some work, because I had chosen a free mspgcc (Gnu GCC port for this cpu) as my compiler. Luckily there were some patches floating around in the net for this. Continue reading “Wireless compost monitoring”