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Minimal design thoughts

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  • tbowmoT Offline
    tbowmoT Offline
    tbowmo
    Admin
    wrote on last edited by
    #66

    And the first prototypes have just arrived
    pcb1.jpg

    pcb2.jpg

    Next step is ordering components. so I can get the thing up and running..

    It's going to be a fun christmas :)

    tbowmoT 1 Reply Last reply
    3
    • tbowmoT tbowmo

      And the first prototypes have just arrived
      pcb1.jpg

      pcb2.jpg

      Next step is ordering components. so I can get the thing up and running..

      It's going to be a fun christmas :)

      tbowmoT Offline
      tbowmoT Offline
      tbowmo
      Admin
      wrote on last edited by
      #67

      on a side note.. this IS a prototype.. probably only 1 or 2 will be assembled, as version 2 is almost ready to hit the press..

      Next version will have more pins available on pinheaders along each side of the board, and power input to the board is placed a more central place (electrical wise).

      So this prototype will be verification of schematics, and check that radio etc. is wired correctly.

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • bjornhallbergB Offline
        bjornhallbergB Offline
        bjornhallberg
        Hero Member
        wrote on last edited by bjornhallberg
        #68

        Great progress!

        If you still use dirtypcbs (what did you think of their work btw?) and have the ability to pretty much create any sort of routing and tabs, you could look into the upcoming Gerber Panelizer:
        http://blog.thisisnotrocketscience.nl/projects/pcb-design-tools/
        Might be more cost effective to order 10x10 pcbs and panelize the hell out of that space. You could fit a ton of different layouts. Tried the tool myself and it saves a ton of time. It can load and rotate gerbers any way you want.

        Only snag is they haven't released the tool yet. You have to request it from from their twitter account. And it is still beta.

        tbowmoT 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • bjornhallbergB bjornhallberg

          Great progress!

          If you still use dirtypcbs (what did you think of their work btw?) and have the ability to pretty much create any sort of routing and tabs, you could look into the upcoming Gerber Panelizer:
          http://blog.thisisnotrocketscience.nl/projects/pcb-design-tools/
          Might be more cost effective to order 10x10 pcbs and panelize the hell out of that space. You could fit a ton of different layouts. Tried the tool myself and it saves a ton of time. It can load and rotate gerbers any way you want.

          Only snag is they haven't released the tool yet. You have to request it from from their twitter account. And it is still beta.

          tbowmoT Offline
          tbowmoT Offline
          tbowmo
          Admin
          wrote on last edited by
          #69

          @bjornhallberg said:

          Great progress!

          If you still use dirtypcbs (what did you think of their work btw?) and have the ability to pretty much create any sort of routing and tabs, you could look into the upcoming Gerber Panelizer:
          http://blog.thisisnotrocketscience.nl/projects/pcb-design-tools/
          Might be more cost effective to order 10x10 pcbs and panelize the hell out of that space. You could fit a ton of different layouts. Tried the tool myself and it saves a ton of time. It can load and rotate gerbers any way you want.

          Only snag is they haven't released the tool yet. You have to request it from from their twitter account. And it is still beta.

          Seems like dirty pcb is doing a great job, compared to the price, only have experience with prinline.dk from previous jobs, but they are expensive like hell (just looked at their prices earlier today, together with Hek, They want 314$ (plus taxes) for the same job, that I pay 14$ for at dirtypcb, only advantage is that they have a turn arround time of 8 days, instead of 4-5 weeks from dirtypcbs.

          It like a nice tool, Have to look at it :) Only problem is, that I have to generate gerbers myself then, instead of just uploading the eagle file, which dirtypcb turns into gerber files for me. (Remember a project 10 years ago, where it was a lot of work in creating gerbers in eagle).

          bjornhallbergB 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • tbowmoT tbowmo

            @bjornhallberg said:

            Great progress!

            If you still use dirtypcbs (what did you think of their work btw?) and have the ability to pretty much create any sort of routing and tabs, you could look into the upcoming Gerber Panelizer:
            http://blog.thisisnotrocketscience.nl/projects/pcb-design-tools/
            Might be more cost effective to order 10x10 pcbs and panelize the hell out of that space. You could fit a ton of different layouts. Tried the tool myself and it saves a ton of time. It can load and rotate gerbers any way you want.

            Only snag is they haven't released the tool yet. You have to request it from from their twitter account. And it is still beta.

            Seems like dirty pcb is doing a great job, compared to the price, only have experience with prinline.dk from previous jobs, but they are expensive like hell (just looked at their prices earlier today, together with Hek, They want 314$ (plus taxes) for the same job, that I pay 14$ for at dirtypcb, only advantage is that they have a turn arround time of 8 days, instead of 4-5 weeks from dirtypcbs.

            It like a nice tool, Have to look at it :) Only problem is, that I have to generate gerbers myself then, instead of just uploading the eagle file, which dirtypcb turns into gerber files for me. (Remember a project 10 years ago, where it was a lot of work in creating gerbers in eagle).

            bjornhallbergB Offline
            bjornhallbergB Offline
            bjornhallberg
            Hero Member
            wrote on last edited by bjornhallberg
            #70

            @tbowmo said:

            Seems like dirty pcb is doing a great job, compared to the price, only have experience with prinline.dk from previous jobs, but they are expensive like hell (just looked at their prices earlier today, together with Hek, They want 314$ (plus taxes) for the same job, that I pay 14$ for at dirtypcb, only advantage is that they have a turn arround time of 8 days, instead of 4-5 weeks from dirtypcbs.

            Ouch, that seems a bit steep. Never heard of any cheap board houses outside of China. OSHPark may be the exception? I thinks they have fabrication in the US right? I heard they were planning to set up a factory in Europe ... don't know if anything ever happened.

            It like a nice tool, Have to look at it :) Only problem is, that I have to generate gerbers myself then, instead of just uploading the eagle file, which dirtypcb turns into gerber files for me. (Remember a project 10 years ago, where it was a lot of work in creating gerbers in eagle).

            I don't know how CAM exports have changed over the years but compared to how backwards everything else works in Eagle, exporting Gerbers is easy. DirtyPCBs have a CAM-file listed on their about page. I sent them Gerbers of Meanpenguin's PCB designs and that seemed to have worked out. Knock on wood. Hopefully I'll have the boards back before xmas. The reason I didn't send the Eagle file was their new warning on the front page regarding Eagle v7+ files. Some unspecified problem with their Eagle 6.x installation. Only iffy thing I've run into so far (on some exports) is the drill file showing the holes all over the place because of the wrong precision settings. Now I'm sure the board house would have fixed this for me (their Gerber tools are bound to a great deal more advanced than mine and can probably detect Excellon formats automatically), but choosing EXCELLON_24 as output solved that problem. It's enough to send them impossible routing and endless stop mask errors ;-)

            Oh and btw, that Gerber Panelizer also helps to circumvent the 5x5cm limit on freeware Eagle since you can take your Gerbers and join them any way you please as a greater whole. Just to point out the obvious.

            tbowmoT 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • bjornhallbergB bjornhallberg

              @tbowmo said:

              Seems like dirty pcb is doing a great job, compared to the price, only have experience with prinline.dk from previous jobs, but they are expensive like hell (just looked at their prices earlier today, together with Hek, They want 314$ (plus taxes) for the same job, that I pay 14$ for at dirtypcb, only advantage is that they have a turn arround time of 8 days, instead of 4-5 weeks from dirtypcbs.

              Ouch, that seems a bit steep. Never heard of any cheap board houses outside of China. OSHPark may be the exception? I thinks they have fabrication in the US right? I heard they were planning to set up a factory in Europe ... don't know if anything ever happened.

              It like a nice tool, Have to look at it :) Only problem is, that I have to generate gerbers myself then, instead of just uploading the eagle file, which dirtypcb turns into gerber files for me. (Remember a project 10 years ago, where it was a lot of work in creating gerbers in eagle).

              I don't know how CAM exports have changed over the years but compared to how backwards everything else works in Eagle, exporting Gerbers is easy. DirtyPCBs have a CAM-file listed on their about page. I sent them Gerbers of Meanpenguin's PCB designs and that seemed to have worked out. Knock on wood. Hopefully I'll have the boards back before xmas. The reason I didn't send the Eagle file was their new warning on the front page regarding Eagle v7+ files. Some unspecified problem with their Eagle 6.x installation. Only iffy thing I've run into so far (on some exports) is the drill file showing the holes all over the place because of the wrong precision settings. Now I'm sure the board house would have fixed this for me (their Gerber tools are bound to a great deal more advanced than mine and can probably detect Excellon formats automatically), but choosing EXCELLON_24 as output solved that problem. It's enough to send them impossible routing and endless stop mask errors ;-)

              Oh and btw, that Gerber Panelizer also helps to circumvent the 5x5cm limit on freeware Eagle since you can take your Gerbers and join them any way you please as a greater whole. Just to point out the obvious.

              tbowmoT Offline
              tbowmoT Offline
              tbowmo
              Admin
              wrote on last edited by
              #71

              @bjornhallberg said:

              I don't know how CAM exports have changed over the years but compared to how backwards everything else works in Eagle, exporting Gerbers is easy. DirtyPCBs have a CAM-file listed on their about page. I sent them Gerbers of Meanpenguin's PCB designs and that seemed to have worked out. Knock on wood. Hopefully I'll have the boards back before xmas. The reason I didn't send the Eagle file was their new warning on the front page regarding Eagle v7+ files. Some unspecified problem with their Eagle 6.x installation. Only iffy thing I've run into so far (on some exports) is the drill file showing the holes all over the place because of the wrong precision settings. Now I'm sure the board house would have fixed this for me (their Gerber tools are bound to a great deal more advanced than mine and can probably detect Excellon formats automatically), but choosing EXCELLON_24 as output solved that problem. It's enough to send them impossible routing and endless stop mask errors ;-)

              Hhm.. don't tell my boards that dirtypcbs have problems with eagle v7 files :) Haven't seen that warning before now.. So cross my fingers, that everything is ok.

              I remember the trouble with excellon format, and getting drill files alligned, but got some files made for printline back then, and they are still making the pcb, so must have done something right :)

              Oh and btw, that Gerber Panelizer also helps to circumvent the 5x5cm limit on freeware Eagle since you can take your Gerbers and join them any way you please as a greater whole. Just to point out the obvious.

              Think that the free eagle is 10x8cm board space, isn't it?

              bjornhallbergB 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • tbowmoT tbowmo

                @bjornhallberg said:

                I don't know how CAM exports have changed over the years but compared to how backwards everything else works in Eagle, exporting Gerbers is easy. DirtyPCBs have a CAM-file listed on their about page. I sent them Gerbers of Meanpenguin's PCB designs and that seemed to have worked out. Knock on wood. Hopefully I'll have the boards back before xmas. The reason I didn't send the Eagle file was their new warning on the front page regarding Eagle v7+ files. Some unspecified problem with their Eagle 6.x installation. Only iffy thing I've run into so far (on some exports) is the drill file showing the holes all over the place because of the wrong precision settings. Now I'm sure the board house would have fixed this for me (their Gerber tools are bound to a great deal more advanced than mine and can probably detect Excellon formats automatically), but choosing EXCELLON_24 as output solved that problem. It's enough to send them impossible routing and endless stop mask errors ;-)

                Hhm.. don't tell my boards that dirtypcbs have problems with eagle v7 files :) Haven't seen that warning before now.. So cross my fingers, that everything is ok.

                I remember the trouble with excellon format, and getting drill files alligned, but got some files made for printline back then, and they are still making the pcb, so must have done something right :)

                Oh and btw, that Gerber Panelizer also helps to circumvent the 5x5cm limit on freeware Eagle since you can take your Gerbers and join them any way you please as a greater whole. Just to point out the obvious.

                Think that the free eagle is 10x8cm board space, isn't it?

                bjornhallbergB Offline
                bjornhallbergB Offline
                bjornhallberg
                Hero Member
                wrote on last edited by bjornhallberg
                #72

                @tbowmo Yes you're right, the Eagle board size is 10x8! Don't know where I got the 5x5 from. Nevertheless, since DirtyPCBs can do pretty mindblowing routing at no extra cost and have a pretty good price on 10x10 also ... you could probably save a great deal by doing what the Not Rocket Science guys did and create a heavily panelized board that covers a handful of different PCBs.

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • RJ_MakeR Offline
                  RJ_MakeR Offline
                  RJ_Make
                  Hero Member
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #73

                  It will be interesting to see if that radio causes any interference for the MCU. Looks like it will be right over the MCU.?

                  RJ_Make

                  tbowmoT 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • RJ_MakeR RJ_Make

                    It will be interesting to see if that radio causes any interference for the MCU. Looks like it will be right over the MCU.?

                    tbowmoT Offline
                    tbowmoT Offline
                    tbowmo
                    Admin
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #74

                    @ServiceXp said:

                    It will be interesting to see if that radio causes any interference for the MCU. Looks like it will be right over the MCU.?

                    the antenna is not above the mcu, and the nrf module is using the entire backside as gnd. So should be shielded.. Also, I am kind of more worried about mcu generating noise for the radio..

                    Specially for the first prototype, where I was a bit daft at placing powersupply pins on the wrong side of the pcb, as far away as possible, from the radio. And letting it run under the CPU to pick up noise from that.. Version 2 has this fixed, where I have the power input pins moved closer to the radio, and using wider tracks for VCC arround the board. (Should have done more reviews on the first design before sending it off to dirtypcbs)

                    RJ_MakeR 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • tbowmoT tbowmo

                      @ServiceXp said:

                      It will be interesting to see if that radio causes any interference for the MCU. Looks like it will be right over the MCU.?

                      the antenna is not above the mcu, and the nrf module is using the entire backside as gnd. So should be shielded.. Also, I am kind of more worried about mcu generating noise for the radio..

                      Specially for the first prototype, where I was a bit daft at placing powersupply pins on the wrong side of the pcb, as far away as possible, from the radio. And letting it run under the CPU to pick up noise from that.. Version 2 has this fixed, where I have the power input pins moved closer to the radio, and using wider tracks for VCC arround the board. (Should have done more reviews on the first design before sending it off to dirtypcbs)

                      RJ_MakeR Offline
                      RJ_MakeR Offline
                      RJ_Make
                      Hero Member
                      wrote on last edited by RJ_Make
                      #75

                      @tbowmo Ah.. I didn't even think about the MCU causing interference for the radio. @Bandra's design suffers from this close proximity interference, which causes, I think, the MCU to lockup. I had to move the radio module from over top the Arduino for stability.

                      RJ_Make

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                      • tbowmoT Offline
                        tbowmoT Offline
                        tbowmo
                        Admin
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #76

                        @ServiceXp

                        On one of my first mockups, I removed the connector on the radio and used some double sided tape to stick it to the back of an arduino micro, and then soldering wires between the boards. Works like a charm on battery. Antenna is just hanging off the edge of the arduino on the end opposite the serial port pins.

                        Using it as a range tester for mysensors, logging into a raspberry pi with my mobile using ssh, and then running a serial port terminal emulator on the raspberry to connect to the serial GW. Then I can walk arround with the battery powered node, and check if the GW receives the data packages on my phone :)

                        Haven't looked at @Bandra's design, but how close is the nrf antenna to the mcu?

                        RJ_MakeR 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • tbowmoT tbowmo

                          @ServiceXp

                          On one of my first mockups, I removed the connector on the radio and used some double sided tape to stick it to the back of an arduino micro, and then soldering wires between the boards. Works like a charm on battery. Antenna is just hanging off the edge of the arduino on the end opposite the serial port pins.

                          Using it as a range tester for mysensors, logging into a raspberry pi with my mobile using ssh, and then running a serial port terminal emulator on the raspberry to connect to the serial GW. Then I can walk arround with the battery powered node, and check if the GW receives the data packages on my phone :)

                          Haven't looked at @Bandra's design, but how close is the nrf antenna to the mcu?

                          RJ_MakeR Offline
                          RJ_MakeR Offline
                          RJ_Make
                          Hero Member
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #77

                          @tbowmo
                          This close.

                          This close

                          RJ_Make

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                          • tbowmoT Offline
                            tbowmoT Offline
                            tbowmo
                            Admin
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #78

                            This is my node, with radio close to the mcu, this works really good. So I would expect that it also works for the small module that I have made.

                            20141211_073618~2.jpg

                            20141211_073604~2.jpg

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            1
                            • tbowmoT Offline
                              tbowmoT Offline
                              tbowmo
                              Admin
                              wrote on last edited by tbowmo
                              #79

                              just ordered components for the first 10 boards. Just about 190$. My wife looked funny at me, as she saw the amount (she was sitting next to me when i ordered).

                              Well birthay present for myself :)

                              bjornhallbergB 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • tbowmoT tbowmo

                                just ordered components for the first 10 boards. Just about 190$. My wife looked funny at me, as she saw the amount (she was sitting next to me when i ordered).

                                Well birthay present for myself :)

                                bjornhallbergB Offline
                                bjornhallbergB Offline
                                bjornhallberg
                                Hero Member
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #80

                                @tbowmo That was a tad more expensive than you expected I guess? Did Mouser add taxes etc at checkout?

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                                • tbowmoT Offline
                                  tbowmoT Offline
                                  tbowmo
                                  Admin
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #81

                                  @bjornhallberg

                                  Yeah, they added Danish VAT to the order..

                                  Just double checked, it's actually only 154$ (925dkk).. Remembered wrong with the exchange rate when I converted earlier, and just took some numbers from the top of my head. The VAT is around 31$.

                                  But still it's a lot of money, specially this time of year..

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                                  • Ivan ZI Offline
                                    Ivan ZI Offline
                                    Ivan Z
                                    Hardware Contributor
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #82

                                    If use one-sided mounting and on other side set CR2450 holder. Will get a small deviceю

                                    20141216_175103[1].jpg

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                                    • tbowmoT Offline
                                      tbowmoT Offline
                                      tbowmo
                                      Admin
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #83

                                      And now the components arrived :d

                                      2014-12-17 20.13.06-2.jpg

                                      Just miss one capacitor, which is out of stock at Mouser. Got a notice that they will get it in stok again in March 2015! So I'll have to see if I can find an alternative (It was decoupling for the radio).

                                      Hopefully I get some time off to do the first board friday evening.

                                      magpernM 1 Reply Last reply
                                      1
                                      • tbowmoT Offline
                                        tbowmoT Offline
                                        tbowmo
                                        Admin
                                        wrote on last edited by tbowmo
                                        #84

                                        So, it's time for board mounting..

                                        One advice, DOUBLE CHECK the component orders, and TRIPLE check them.. After I got the shipment from mouser, I discovered, that I accidentally had ordered some capacitors in 0101 housing, instead of 0204.. that's DAMN small components.. And I can't use it.. Well thats about 10$ down the drain.. (It was all the decoupling capacitors for the board).

                                        Also found out that I forgot to order a ~100R resistor for the status LED's.. What a bummer!

                                        So I'll have to see if I can source the components quickly from some friends in the next couple of days

                                        Anyways, pic's from the build:

                                        first depanelling in the "garage"
                                        2014-12-19 21.32.16.jpg

                                        (And just for the fun of it a picture from the garage.. one of my other projects)
                                        2014-12-19 21.32.56.jpg

                                        And then to the electronics workshop, mounted the atmega
                                        2014-12-19 21.59.10.jpg

                                        And with NRF module attached...
                                        2014-12-19 22.52.35.jpg

                                        bjornhallbergB 1 Reply Last reply
                                        1
                                        • tbowmoT tbowmo

                                          So, it's time for board mounting..

                                          One advice, DOUBLE CHECK the component orders, and TRIPLE check them.. After I got the shipment from mouser, I discovered, that I accidentally had ordered some capacitors in 0101 housing, instead of 0204.. that's DAMN small components.. And I can't use it.. Well thats about 10$ down the drain.. (It was all the decoupling capacitors for the board).

                                          Also found out that I forgot to order a ~100R resistor for the status LED's.. What a bummer!

                                          So I'll have to see if I can source the components quickly from some friends in the next couple of days

                                          Anyways, pic's from the build:

                                          first depanelling in the "garage"
                                          2014-12-19 21.32.16.jpg

                                          (And just for the fun of it a picture from the garage.. one of my other projects)
                                          2014-12-19 21.32.56.jpg

                                          And then to the electronics workshop, mounted the atmega
                                          2014-12-19 21.59.10.jpg

                                          And with NRF module attached...
                                          2014-12-19 22.52.35.jpg

                                          bjornhallbergB Offline
                                          bjornhallbergB Offline
                                          bjornhallberg
                                          Hero Member
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #85

                                          @tbowmo Sorry to hear about your sourcing troubles. Wish there was an easier and cheaper way to source things.

                                          Smart depaneling, I have a saw like that standing around as well. I have used it to cut some aluminium profiles before but never considered it for cutting pcbs. Still, I will continue to try and look into tabs and "mouse bites" to make depaneling a bit easier.

                                          Is that an old Ferguson that you're renovating? Sorry, but I immediately thought of Frank Erichsen ;-)

                                          So, no problems hand soldering then? Can you complete the circuit for testing or do the missing components get in the way?

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