The 45 In 1 Sensor Module Board Kit Upgrade Version is a comprehensive electronic sensor collection designed for Arduino-compatible development boards including UNO R3, Mega 2560, Nano, Leonardo, and other microcontroller platforms. This upgrade version kit contains 45 commonly used sensor and module boards for learning electronics, embedded systems, robotics, automation, and IoT applications.
The kit includes a wide variety of digital and analog modules such as temperature sensors, sound detection modules, flame sensors, IR transmitters and receivers, obstacle avoidance sensors, joystick modules, relay modules, light sensors, vibration sensors, magnetic sensors, laser transmitters, RGB LEDs, and communication modules. Each module is built on a compact PCB with clearly marked input/output pins for easy interfacing and fast prototyping.
Designed for educational and development purposes, this sensor kit helps users understand sensor integration, signal processing, microcontroller programming, and real-time electronic control systems. It is suitable for beginners, students, hobbyists, and engineers working on Arduino projects, smart devices, robotics systems, and STEM experiments.
The modules are compatible with standard Arduino IDE programming and support both digital and analog signal communication. The compact plastic bag packaging makes the kit lightweight and easy to store or transport.
Features
- Includes 45 commonly used electronic sensor and module boards
- Compatible with Arduino UNO, Mega, Nano, Leonardo, and similar boards
- Supports digital and analog signal interfacing
- Suitable for robotics, automation, IoT, and embedded system projects
- Easy-to-connect modules with labeled PCB interfaces
- Ideal for electronics learning and STEM education
- Upgrade version with improved module selection
- Compact and portable plastic bag packaging
Applications
- Arduino learning and development
- Robotics and automation systems
- Sensor testing and prototyping
- Smart home projects
- STEM and engineering education
- DIY electronics experiments
- Embedded system development














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