The parts from the prototype distributor arrived yesterday.
We assembled the first prototype in significantly shorter time, than we did on site at the MakerFaire. Having a proper pcb makes a hell of a difference.
Thanks to jue, andy, cawi and lemoer for the efforts!
And this is the next revision, after the other members of our freifunk community complained about 'one' being to few LEDs. Tripled the LEDs, tripled the current, by cutting the base resistors value in thirds, and reducing the corresponding pullups resistance to 4.7K. Still purple, still taking 5V but now from a smd micro usb port instead of a tht one.
Side node: Reichelt does have exactly one micro usb port... And thats footprint is not known to KiCad...
We aim for another usb port, in order to have it prepicked by our upcoming chinese pcb vendor. So this surely not be the last but current revision:
A few days ago we started to move our design from stripeboards to actual pcbs currently manifactured by OSH Park, as well as Aisler. As it turns out, KiCad is intuitive enough, as I got a working prototype in the first try.
The instructions we gave to the kids assembling the stripeboards on the MakerFaire 2019 in Hannover
The children got a drawing of the assembled stripeboard as reference.
They were encouraged to start with the heat resistant parts of small height -> the wire bridges After those they got the hang of the soldering. And were ready to go on with the resistors.
2
cut paths
The 2x4 ESP holder required the four conducting paths to be separated with e.g. a boxcutter. This was ideally done by their parents, but never by themselves.
3
polarized parts
Before they kept going with the LEDs, the transistor or the capacitors, they were told about the polarization of these parts, and how they could tell the difference between the legs.
They furthermore got the hint to bend their LEDs in a 90° angle, in order to have them shine towards the front of the device, just like a real TV-remote would.
is there any code for this?