I use a USBasp programmer. Works like a charm with AVRDude, AVRDudes, Atmel Studio 6.2 and the Arduino IDE.
There are a lot of sellers for this programmer. It is designed by
Thomas FischlThere are a lot of clones, for example on
Aliexpress
Perfect, thank you very much.
David.
Hi David,
You should check the AT AVR DRAGON from Atmel. This unit is a development board and a programmer. This unit also allowing ISP, High Voltage Serial Programming , JTAG and DebugWIRE debugging for a wide range of AVR 8/32Bit microcontroller. The DRAGON works fine with Atmel Studio.
I have never used a programmer for Atmel and I want to start working with these controllers.
Anything specific? What is so fascinating in Atmel's uCs, Mr. Fanboy? Do you have the Atmel's logo tattooed on a butt or what?
If you want a history lesson (and the tattoo hasn't faded out yet), try their 8051 or AVR.
I have never used a programmer for Atmel and I want to start working with these controllers.
Anything specific? What is so fascinating in Atmel's uCs, Mr. Fanboy? Do you have the Atmel's logo tattooed on a butt or what?
If you want a history lesson (and the tattoo hasn't faded out yet), try their 8051 or AVR.
be mindful of your thought... :facepalm: what you said can be exactly you. history lesson is good but in this particular case, and usually regarding technological advancement, lest forget the history and stand where we are today... please dont make a bad day for people otherwise please go away...
hi
to my knowledge it will only work with atmel studio 4.
hope that's helpful
I use a USBasp programmer. Works like a charm with AVRDude, AVRDudes, Atmel Studio 6.2 and the Arduino IDE.
There are a lot of sellers for this programmer. It is designed by Thomas Fischl
There are a lot of clones, for example on Aliexpress
hi, i am just starting out in microcontrollers (i am 14) and i cannot afford a official programmer (like a avrisp just yet) , so how did you get it to work with atmel studio 6? thanks
+1 for USBasp.
I have an authentic MKII but never use it since the cheapo programmer also powers my breadboard.
I'll chime in on the AVR bandwagon too. I have lots of boards. Altera, ST, Cypress, PIC etc and usually end up playing around with Atmel chips since they are easy to use, cover the simple stuff very well and have TONS of code floating around on the internet for common tasks. Great learning tool IMO even though the competition is cheaper and more advanced.
Hi David,
You should check the AT AVR DRAGON from Atmel. This unit is a development board and a programmer. This unit also allowing ISP, High Voltage Serial Programming , JTAG and DebugWIRE debugging for a wide range of AVR 8/32Bit microcontroller. The DRAGON works fine with Atmel Studio.
I'd strongly consider the Atmel ICE instead of the Dragon these days. It's available for about the same price (if you get the kit that only has one adapter cable), and supports all of Atmel's AVRs and ARMs via every protocol except HVPP/HVSP. Debugging ought to be much faster, too, but I haven't really compared. The Dragon is probably the way to go if you really need high voltage programming or a ZIF socket, otherwise it's not nearly as attractive as it was when the JTAG-ICE was still $200.
I'd strongly consider the Atmel ICE instead of the Dragon these days. It's available for about the same price (if you get the kit that only has one adapter cable), and supports all of Atmel's AVRs and ARMs via every protocol except HVPP/HVSP. Debugging ought to be much faster, too, but I haven't really compared. The Dragon is probably the way to go if you really need high voltage programming or a ZIF socket, otherwise it's not nearly as attractive as it was when the JTAG-ICE was still $200.
This. For the long time, Dragon was the de facto standard, recommended by default, hobbyist-level official Atmel programmer. This has changed with the Atmel-ICE going down in price to the Dragon level. Atmel-ICE is the current mid-range go-to programmer/debugger. It is the one getting new parts support and regular firmware updates with new Atmel Studio releases. My recommendation is, if 50 bucks is not a problem, go for it. I'd say do yourself a favor and get an official tool. You'll get your fair share of head scratching while debugging your projects and code - the last thing you want is debugging your debug tool. The pretty much only practical use for HV programming (the feature Dragon has and ICE lacks) would be reflashing AVR fuse bits after you lock yourself out, so be careful with those. As for the speed, while I don't have any figures for the classic 8-bit AVR chips (other than "much faster"), I've done a test with dumping of the contents of an UC3A1512 micro (AVR32, 512kB of Flash) and it was 15 seconds vs. 95 seconds in favor of Atmel-ICE. ICE does SAM (Atmel ARM series) as well.
I already ordered a USBasp based programmer, thank all for the positive replies.
David.
Mhm... one thing you should consider that most of these "3rd party" programmers have one flaw.
They work fine on 5V devices but only some work with 3.3V devices.
The AVR ISP MK2 has one serious advantage, it will masure the target device voltage and adjust the interface voltage acordingly.
I have one of these chap ones somewere, i bought it back when the AVR ISP MK2 was fairly expensive but retired it quickly and got myself a "proper" programmer.
Mhm... one thing you should consider that most of these "3rd party" programmers have one flaw.
They work fine on 5V devices but only some work with 3.3V devices.
Mine has a 3.3 / 5V jumper. Works flawless.