# bme680 Example implementation of BME680 software. The I2C/SPI drivers are meant to run on a Raspberry Pi 4 but you can figure out how to port it. ![Raspberry Pi](.gitea/pi.png) Connecting the purple BME680 module board to SPI: | SPI func | BME680 Pin | Raspberry Pi Pin | | -------- | ---------- | ---------------- | | MISO | "SDO" | GPIO 9 (Pin 21) | | MOSI | "SDA" | GPIO 10 (Pin 19) | | SCLK | "SCL" | GPIO 11 (Pin 23) | | CS | "CS" | GPIO 8 (Pin 24) | ## spi demo ``` par_t1: 26203 par_t2: 26519 par_t3: 3 par_p1: 35008 par_p2: -10284 par_p3: 88 par_p4: 9692 par_p5: -202 par_p6: 30 par_p7: 24 par_p8: -4 par_p9: -3469 par_p10: 30 par_h1: 794 par_h2: 1007 par_h3: 0 par_h4: 45 par_h5: 20 par_h6: 120 par_h7: -100 par_g1: 208 par_g2: 59781 par_g3: 18 range_switching_error: 19 res_heat_range: 1 res_heat_val: 46 float mode tfine: 104906.162500 temp: 20.489485 degC press: 100089.609193 Pa humidity: 64.456540 % RH gas resistance: 12100.310308 Ohm == for heater target=300.0 and ambient temp=19.0 (degC) === gas_valid_r: 1 === heat_stab_r: 1 ``` ## i2c demo ``` par_t1: 26125 par_t2: 26370 par_t3: 3 par_p1: 36262 par_p2: -10371 par_p3: 88 par_p4: 6713 par_p5: -103 par_p6: 30 par_p7: 31 par_p8: -251 par_p9: -3158 par_p10: 30 par_h1: 776 par_h2: 1010 par_h3: 0 par_h4: 45 par_h5: 20 par_h6: 120 par_h7: -100 par_g1: 183 par_g2: 59281 par_g3: 18 range_switching_error: 19 res_heat_range: 1 res_heat_val: 39 float mode tfine: 97289.819111 temp: 19.001918 degC press: 100226.479673 Pa humidity: 67.022216 % RH gas resistance: 14702.868852 Ohm == for heater target=300.0 and ambient temp=19.0 (degC) === gas_valid_r: 1 === heat_stab_r: 1 ``` Note: Two different BME680 devices, one on each type of bus. Perhaps they'd read closer to eachother following a burn-in or something.