The LPCXpresso family provides a powerful and flexible development system for NXP Cortex-M microcontrollers. The LPCXpresso18S37 development board, developed by NXP, supports the evaluation and prototyping of the LPC4300 series MCUs, featuring the LPC18S37 in a 100-pin BGA package. LPCXpresso™ is a low-cost development platform provided by NXP that supports NXP's Arm-based microcontrollers. The platform includes a simplified Eclipse-based IDE and low-cost target boards with SWD debugger. LPCXpresso is an end-to-end solution that supports embedded engineers throughout the application development process from initial evaluation to final production.
The LPCXpresso1125 development board was developed by NXP based on the LPC1125JBD48 version of the MCU to support the evaluation and prototyping of the LPC112x series MCU.
The LPCXpresso family of circuit boards provides a powerful and flexible development system for NXP Cortex-M microcontrollers. The LPCXpresso54102 circuit board features NXP's LPC54102 low-power microcontroller and is designed to help you get started designing easily.
The GB60 Demonstration Kit contains everything designers need to develop and evaluate MC9S08GB or GT Series applications. It can be used with Metrowerks CodeWarrior®™ Development Studio for S08 Special Edition to modify demo code or develop new code. The evaluation board supports source-level real-time debugging of the code and programming of the device's flash memory; neither requires additional hardware.
NXP's 32-bit MPC5668G MCU is based on dual-core Power Architecture® technology and can connect all communication protocols in the vehicle on a single device. The dual-core architecture provides the required throughput performance to ensure real-time operation. In addition, it is backed by a powerful third-party ecological cooperation system.
The NXP® MPC5604E evaluation board for automotive safety and chassis control applications includes the P&E debugger and all power cables.
The XDC564B-C is an evaluation system supporting the NXP® MPC564xB-C MPU. The system consists of an XPC56xxMB motherboard and an adapter card plugged into the motherboard. There are a variety of different adapter cards available to evaluate the different packages of the MPC564xB-C series MPU. The evaluation system provides the user with full access to the CPU, including all of the CPU's I/O signals and motherboard peripherals.
The LPCXpresso824-MAX board with NXP®'s LPC824 Cortex®-M0+ microcontroller is designed to make starting your project as easy as possible.
The LPCXpresso812-MAX circuit board features NXP's LPC812 Cortex-M0+ microcontroller and is designed to help you get started with your design. LPCXpresso™ is a low-cost development platform provided by NXP that supports NXP's Arm-based microcontrollers. The platform includes a simplified Eclipse-based IDE and low-cost target boards with a JTAG debugger. LPCXpresso is an end-to-end solution that supports embedded engineers developing applications from initial evaluation to final production.
Developed jointly by NXP and Embedded Artists, LPC-Link 2 is a scalable, stand-alone hardware debugger that supports a variety of development tools and IDEs using a variety of downloadable firmware images. In addition, it itself can be used as an evaluation board for evaluating the NXP LPC4370 triple-core MCU.
NXP's MTRCKTSPS5643L Motor Control Development Kit is suitable for applications requiring a PMSM motor, such as active suspensions and electric powertrains.
The PK-HCS08GB60 starter kit is designed for evaluating the MC9S08GB60 microcontroller and debugging small user applications. The starter kit leverages the CodeWarrior® integrated development environment (which combines an editor, assembler, C compiler and debugger) and the NXP BDM interface to allow users to download their application into the microcontroller's flash memory and debug it. Together with CodeWarrior®, this starter kit gives you everything you need to write, compile, download, in-circuit simulation, and debug user code. Full-speed program execution enables you to perform hardware and software testing in real time. The starter kit connects to the host computer via a USB port. The prototyping area allows you to connect your own small application.