0 Members and 6 Guests are viewing this topic.
Hello,I'm currently developing a cheap breakout board for the TI nSpire series. I am developping this because I don't like to solder directly to my nSpire. This breakout board will be converting the dock connector to a connector with 0.1 inch pitch (normal header size). All 26 pins will be connected to a main connector, with two seperate pin headers for easy connecting of the UART, 3.3V and ground. I'm letting you know this because if I get the breakout board prototypes, I get 10 pieces. Is anyone intersted in buying such a breakout connector? The price will be around €7 or €8 + shipping. I'm not at home ATM, so I will be posting some pics of the digital PCB render tomorrow. DebboR
So it's something like an adapter that makes connecting something to the connnector strip/pins easier? Nice!
You mean this : http://levak.free.fr/ftp/nspire/dock-nspire/ ?
Hi,I'm a bit confused on the way you'll try to connect to the dock connector ... using a dock connector ...Indeed, if you look at any Nspire Cradle, you'll see that it has some brushes in order to keep every pin connected : <img>
Looks nice, hope it will work nicely with what levak said and the thickness too.Also, you should put "TI-Nspire" instead of "TI nSpire"
Quote from: Levak on December 15, 2012, 11:05:04 amHi,I'm a bit confused on the way you'll try to connect to the dock connector ... using a dock connector ...Indeed, if you look at any Nspire Cradle, you'll see that it has some brushes in order to keep every pin connected : <img>Yes, you're correct that I haven't explained it at all :-) . This connector is supposed to connect in a totally different way. I will have this board manufactured with 1mm thickness (a little bit thinner than the normal 1.6mm), so that it fits snug between the actual dock connector and the protective sliding cover over it. Onto the pads, a tiny coat of solder is applied so the connections are raised a bit. This should be enough to keep all contacts connected.DebboR
Quote from: DebboR on December 15, 2012, 11:09:54 amQuote from: Levak on December 15, 2012, 11:05:04 amHi,I'm a bit confused on the way you'll try to connect to the dock connector ... using a dock connector ...Indeed, if you look at any Nspire Cradle, you'll see that it has some brushes in order to keep every pin connected : <img>Yes, you're correct that I haven't explained it at all :-) . This connector is supposed to connect in a totally different way. I will have this board manufactured with 1mm thickness (a little bit thinner than the normal 1.6mm), so that it fits snug between the actual dock connector and the protective sliding cover over it. Onto the pads, a tiny coat of solder is applied so the connections are raised a bit. This should be enough to keep all contacts connected.DebboRSorry, but this does not work in real life : if pin 26 and pin 1 are higher of 10µ than the others, numerous pin in the middle wont me connected and will be really annoying while used. Also, some of the pins may create sparks and may crash the calc (already experimented that).Look at any USB connectors, it also has brushes and stoppers.Also, 1mm is really tiny and may break, but is not as tiny as it should be to get under the dock cover.If your system (or prototype) works, nice for you, but I will still have doubt on the reliability of each pins.
A connector will cost you about $2 or less. Make it optional for the user to intstall this for themselves. Universal prints are the way to go.