Nuacht

An Arduino Nano or a Micro might be the best options If a small board sounds like the most appropriate choice.
The “N” in CAN stands for network, after all. The trick is to create a device ID for each desired CANSerial interface, which is done in his library using the usual Arduino setup step.
It's programmed using the Arduino IDE, so most of the sketches built into the software can be tested with the Nano. The board also operates at 5V, similar to most Arduino boards.
Developers, engineers and Arduino enthusiasts may be interested in a new open source piece of hardware designed for CAN bus Arduino projects.
Following on from the Arduino Portenta comes another new board from Arduino - the Nano RP2040 Connect, which was first announced back in January.
Arduino has introduced a Nano shaped board with a Wi-Fi and Bluetooth LE capable Espressif’s ESP32-S3 microcontroller, supporting it with the Arduino IDE and MicroPython. “Beginners can explore in an ...