Arduino Sensor Shield V5 0 Manual ((free)) Jun 2026
The core innovation of the V5.0 shield is the standardization of the 3-pin male header, known as the GVS interface:
: I2C, SPI, UART (Serial), Bluetooth, APC220, and SD Card 🗺️ Board Layout and Pinout Breakdown
Servos utilize the standard GVS connector. arduino sensor shield v5 0 manual
Ensure the and an external 5V supply is wired to the blue terminal block. Look at the digital pin rows (e.g., Digital 9 ).
Ensure the dark wire (brown/black) aligns with , the red wire aligns with V , and the orange wire aligns with S . The core innovation of the V5
This manual provides a comprehensive technical overview, pinout breakdown, power management guide, and step-by-step instructions for utilizing the Sensor Shield V5.0 in your robotics and automation projects. Technical Specifications Specification Arduino Uno R3, Duemilanove, Leonardo, Mega 2560 Input Voltage (External) 5V to 12V DC via screw terminals Operating Voltage 5V DC (supplied from Arduino or external source) Interface Breakouts Digital I/O, Analog Input, I2C/IIC, UART (Serial), SPI Dedicated Interfaces
: The shield bridges the Arduino's onboard 5V regulator with the shield's VCC rows. Use this only for low-power sensors. Ensure the dark wire (brown/black) aligns with ,
Partially. Digital pins D0–D13 and A0–A5 map correctly, but extra Mega pins are not broken out.
The reset button on the shield should align perfectly with the reset button on the Arduino. The USB port on the Arduino should stick out the "short side" of the shield.
Servos draw significant current, especially when starting up or stalling. If you try to power multiple SG90 or MG996R servos from the Arduino's internal regulator, the Arduino will crash, reset, or permanently burn out.