RetroPie in a Dreamcast VMU!
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@obsidianspider said in RetroPie in a Dreamcast VMU!:
@ABrugsch Which charge/boost board did you end up getting?
Uhhhh... A random ebay one that someone in the sudo discord pointed me to. I'll get a link for you but I haven't been able to find a similar one on aliexpress or other shops since.
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@obsidianspider
here you go: came in about 2 weeks
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/252442590514
I haven't hooked it up yet as it only came the other day, but I reckon once the USB A socket has been removed and I replace the 3.0uH inductor with a flat one, then it'll be good to go -
@ABrugsch Thanks! I'm curious as to how it'll work out. I'll keep an eye on your build over at sudomod, and thanks for being one of the first to attempt this.
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If you are interested in doing it, I actually need to make a few custom PCBs myself. Perhaps I could make a prototype one for you to start off with and see how you like it.
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@masteryoer It's just a general "I want to learn how to do this one day" kind of thing. I am more curious about how to design them. I'd probably have someone like OSH Park actually make them for me, but I appreciate it. Etching one myself is something I can see me tinkering with at some point in the future.
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@obsidianspider etching them yourself is overrated now that it's so cheap to get them made by OSHP/PCBway etc.
however for a keyboard PCB I have planned, self etching might be the only way to go for the prototype phase ;) -
$5 a square inch for a prototype board is hardly cheap. Etchant can be made with 'mostly' household materials and costs a lot less when prototyping, and also has the ability for rapid prototyping as you don't have to design, wait 12-14 days to find out it doesn't work, waste the $20-30 it cost to produce it, design another one, spend another 20-30 to find out it's still wrong, etc. I would definitely suggest getting one printed the right way after design is tested and working, but for prototyping it's rather expensive.
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yeah the PCB fab option isnt really really cheap, but i guess you will know for sure that any problems you have are from bad design rather than a bad etch
some of the Chinese ones are reasonable. got 5 of my PiCB boards made for $10 over on "pcb way" but the postage stung me $12
the same boards from OSHpark would have been $42.05 for 3 boards, but no shipping costs
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@masteryoer it depends on how complex and how fine your design is. If you're doing stuff with big through hole components then sure. if you've got fine pitch SMD IC's then good luck getting results first time.
also by the time I've farted about with the noxious chemicals, set everything up in a safe environment, and also disposed of the chemicals in an environmentally safe way, then yeah sure, $5 per sq. in. (x3) is of the more pricy, but PCBway is $10 plus shipping for 10 copies of a 10cm x 10cm board. sure there are pros and cons to both methods, and if ultimate cheap is your goal then self etching is the way to go. but it's now become "cheap enough" that I really am beyond caring to mess about with etchant. been there, done that, got chemical burns in the T-shirt (joke)
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@moosepr I have heard of PCBWay, but didn't think to use them for smaller boards as I had thought they had a minimum size requirement. I need a couple of custom small PCBs made for some xbox 360 components that I removed for use for another console I am building for a friend. $10 for 10 boards isn't bad, but would they allow me to make 10 different designs for that same price?
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@masteryoer it's 10 copies, so if you can fit multiple designs into 10cm x 10cm then yes. but i think they have a small surcharge for multiple ccts and distinct boards from what I've heard.
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@masteryoer im not sure to be honest. you may be able to submit the one file with the multiple boards on it i guess. They do have a live chat on the page. I just did a quick online quote, 10 boards, 22x13mm (a board i have on osh) comes in at $10 but then i think the cheapest shipping is going to be about $12
the same thing from osh (have to order 12 of them) comes in at $8.80 with free shipping
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@obsidianspider Thanks dude!
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@satri360 Your build is fantastic! Is the line down the middle of the screen from damage, or a driver issue?
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@obsidianspider I accidentally broke the OLED when I was struggling to put the guts in the case. Second LCD had defect as it showed horizontal split and now I am waiting for the third one.
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That's a lot of OLED screens, and possibly a lot of money.
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@satri360 Did Adafruit cover the one that was defective?
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@ABrugsch said in RetroPie in a Dreamcast VMU!:
@masteryoer it depends on how complex and how fine your design is. If you're doing stuff with big through hole components then sure. if you've got fine pitch SMD IC's then good luck getting results first time.
also by the time I've farted about with the noxious chemicals, set everything up in a safe environment, and also disposed of the chemicals in an environmentally safe way, then yeah sure, $5 per sq. in. (x3) is of the more pricy, but PCBway is $10 plus shipping for 10 copies of a 10cm x 10cm board. sure there are pros and cons to both methods, and if ultimate cheap is your goal then self etching is the way to go. but it's now become "cheap enough" that I really am beyond caring to mess about with etchant. been there, done that, got chemical burns in the T-shirt (joke)
I've recently received boards from both SeeedStudio which also is a China pcb manufacturer that I'm pretty happy with.
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seeed is on my (long) list of recommended PCB shops. DFRobot is another... for small orders they are mostly pretty competitive with each other, just depends what fab features you need as some extras are more expensive than others. for instance, OSHPark is definitely one of the more expensive places, but they include ENIG finish in that price, which pushes the price up massively at PCBWay. it's definitely all horses for courses and worth shopping around
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