Back in 2017, I had this interesting idea - What if you stretched a dev-board out like an accordion? From fat and compressed to stretched and skinny? I played with this idea and started experimenting with male header-pins; I would take 4 pins, remove 2 from the center, and start placing them on an empty breadboard, just feeling things out.
![](https://cdn.hackaday.io/images/9887281628662281347.jpg)
It seemed natural to have my pins line up with the gaps in the bus lines. Especially once a pot was placed on the board. "When would I ever need a conection directly from an I/O pins to a bus rail?", I thought. I decided to place the microcontroller in the middle, so I left some room for it and the supporting circuitry. With the micro in the middle, half the traces would run upwards and the other half downards; nothing would get too cramped.
![](https://cdn.hackaday.io/images/8120391628662359972.jpg)
I decided to go with an Atmega32u4, for the built-in USB, in a QFN package. I felt like rotating it 45° would make it easier to run traces, and I'd seen it implemented before, so it felt like a good choice. I made an adapter board to convert the 2x3 ICSP to a 1x6, so that I'd have those pins accessible on the breadboard as well. I went with a 4 layer design because, at the time, I honestly didn't think this could be done in 2 layers; I even went down to 0603 parts for the first time! Once I settled on something I felt would work, I placed my order at OSHPark.
![](https://cdn.hackaday.io/images/2409631628662411191.png)
It was really exciting when the boards and parts came. It was a big challenge, I had a lot of really small 0603 parts, some tweezers, a syringe of solder paste, a hot-air tool, and a cheap-o soldering iron. It wasn't all that pretty, my design wasn't perfect *cough* don't look to closely at the crystal *cough* but I did get it working. I was able to solder everything, flash the bootloader, and upload some code through the Arduino IDE. Success!
![](https://cdn.hackaday.io/images/1884161628662799715.jpg)
I had fun playing around with it.
I emulated a keyboard to make a USB controller for playing retro games on a NES emulator:
I made a simple unipolar stepper-motor driver:
And experimented with using the bus-rails for I2C devices:
It was pretty fun and I was proud of my achievement; I cleared a lot of new challenges for the first time with this project. I took a novel concept through to a working prototype, I designed a 4-layer PCB with power-planes, I made a lot of my own footprints (I am so lucky that crystal still worked despite my screw-up), I designed with 0603 parts, I used a QFN microcontroller, and I soldered it all up without fancy equipment or stencils - and it worked!
I'd also like to take a moment and thank Chris Gammell. When I studied electronics engineering technology at NAIT (Fall 2010 - Spring2012), PCB design was not yet included in the course; so I had to teach myself! If it weren't for Chris's KiCad tutorials, I would never have been able to pull this off.
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