Arduino UNO Mini Limited Edition

by Arduino

The Arduino UNO Mini Limited Edition is a collector’s item for serious Arduino lovers. It’s a miniaturized but fully functioning version of the well-known Arduino UNO, in a special livery and packaging.

The world's favorite development board has gone mini. Everything in this version of the Arduino UNO is unique. Black and gold, finishing, elegant design and packaging, all delivered to the highest standard. A little jewel to celebrate the Arduino community and what we’ve been doing together for all these years.

Each item is unique and numbered on the PCB, and includes a hand-signed letter from the founders. It’s a limited edition, so get while it’s in stock!

For serious Arduino UNO lovers

Arduino UNO Mini Limited Edition is a collector’s item for serious Arduino Lovers: hobbyists, students, makers, reimaginers, dreamers, hopers, fans, engineers, designers, questioners, cake-makers, problem-solvers, puzzlers, gamers, debaters, developers, entrepreneurs, architects, future-shapers, musicians, scientists... 10 million projects based on (official) Uno boards that have contributed to this incredible story.

Numero UNO in the Maker Space

“Uno” means one in Italian and was chosen in 2010 to mark the release of the Arduino IDE 1.0 software, five years after the Arduino project was born.
With over 10 million official UNO boards running amazing projects around the world, the Arduino UNO has been the number one choice for makers for over a decade.

This limited edition celebrates our most iconic board, and all of the amazing projects that our community has created over the years. The UNO Mini LE functions exactly as the classic UNO, so it can very easily be used in any UNO projects.

Getting Started

The Getting Started section contains all the information you need to configure your board, use the Arduino Software (IDE), and start tinkering with coding and electronics.

Technical Specifications

The Arduino UNO Mini LE is a microcontroller board based on the ATmega328P (datasheet). It has 14 digital inputs/outputs (six of which can be used as PWM outputs), six analog inputs, a 16MHz ceramic resonator, a USB-C connector, and a reset button. Contains everything needed to support the microcontroller. Simply connect it to a computer with a USB cable, use a power adapter, or connect a battery to get started.

Microcontroller ATmega328P
USB connector USB-C
Built-in LED Pin 13
Digital I/O Pins 14
Analog input pins 6
PWM pins 6
UART yes
I2C yes
SPI yes
Circuit operating voltage 5V
Input voltage (limit) 6-12V
Battery connector None.
DC Current per I/O Pin 20 mA
DC Current for 3.3V Pin 50 mA
Main Processor ATmega328P 16 MHz
USB-Serial Processor ATmega16U2 16 MHz
Memory ATmega328P 2KB SRAM, 32KB FLASH, 1KB EEPROM
Weight 8.05 g
Width 26.70 mm
Length 34.20 mm

Documentation

This board is open-source hardware, get the sources here.