




🚀 Unlock FPGA mastery with the Arty A7 — where your ideas take flight!
The Digilent Arty A7 is a compact, high-performance FPGA development board featuring Xilinx Artix-7 chips (35T or 100T variants), clock speeds over 450MHz, 256MB DDR3L memory, and versatile connectivity options including Ethernet and USB. Designed for makers and hobbyists, it supports extensive customization through multiple I/O interfaces and Pmod expansion, making it the ultimate platform for flexible embedded system development.









| ASIN | B07D1DVRG6 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #129,056 in Computers ( See Top 100 in Computers ) #1,395 in Motherboards |
| Item model number | 410-319 |
| Manufacturer | Digilent |
| Product Dimensions | 7.62 x 5.08 x 2.54 cm; 320 g |
H**S
As a beginner learning about FPGAs it's hard for me to write a meaningful review. Learning through a Udemy course. Chose Xilinx because the software toolchain seems better. Free version is great for a beginner.
O**S
Quand je l'ai acheté il était à 120 euros (et le prix est monté à 140 depuis), et j'ai reçu le modèle 410-319-1 qui est supérieur au 410-319, donc j'ai eu de la chance! Le cable USB-micro USB n'est pas fourni, pensez à en avoir un sous la main!
M**N
Ottimo prodotto
M**N
Documentation and examples are well written and easy to understand compared to competitor FPGAs.
P**M
First thing I liked about the Arty was that I was surprised by the size, it is about 25% smaller than I imagined which is good. Another thing is that it can be DC powered by an external DC barrel jack power supply -- so no more USB power issues. I used the "KFD Power Supply 12V 3A" from Amazon. It's got JTAG over USB so you can debug Microblaze projects over USB without requiring an expensive JTAG programmer. Some things I don't like about it are mainly the online reference manual and instructions which are pretty unclear and perhaps not very well organised for novice users. For example links to useful information aren't easy to find and there is no simple pin reference, you've got to troll through their high level manual or low level schematic -- personally I like looking through the XDC file as things are more organised than a schematic even though its not 100% human readable. You need to be careful to select the correct part (XC7A35TICSG324-1L) which wasn't obvious from the get go -- so I wasted many minutes of synthesis getting it right.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
3 days ago