Hey everyone!

I jumped into the ergomech rabbit hole sometime last year and after using a sofle as my daily driver since then, I now decided it’s time to build my own “thing”. After going through endless revisions to figure out what I actually want, and trying to learn how to trace PCBs, this is what I have come up with: A choc-spaced 56 keys wireless build with a scrollwheel and some staggering.

It’s a reversible PCB. To make this work with single pin hole for both sides, I used jumpers for pins that can not be set in software (VCC, GND, RST). For rows/columns, I plan to do a different mapping in software to not have a jumper for every single pin.

All files including the kicad_pcb and ergogen config are available and open source at github: https://github.com/dnlbauer/splitkeyboard .

However, this is the first thing I ever designed. Therefore, I was hoping if you guys could have a look at the PCB before I get it etched and point out if there are any obvious errors?

Of course, I am also happy about any feedback in general. :)

  • @Skree
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    31 year ago

    I’ll give things a look over. First thought, you ground poured, but didn’t link any of it together with vias. That would be helpful in ensuring good ground return paths.

    • @Skree
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      31 year ago

      Yeah just some vias for return to ground; everything looks reasonably fine from a quick overview. You have space, and cross talk really isn’t a concern, but more padding between signal traces could be helpful in some of the closer areas. Though all of that is minimal in concern.

      • @dnlOP
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        21 year ago

        I just kept the default value (I think its 0.2mm) between traces. I could probably double it at some points where multiple traces are bundled though. Thanks for the hint!

    • @dnlOP
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      21 year ago

      thanks for the imput. Do you mean I should just place some random vias to connect both sides of the ground plane? To be honest, I dont understand exactly what this ground plane is used for since none of the traces actually connect to it. Is it merely for shielding against signal noise?

      • @Skree
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        21 year ago

        I’m no electrical engineer. But I was informed that having the return to ground close to all data connections is a good thing from a EMI and signaling perspective. I often put ground vias near all my rows and column pads.