First PCB with the Smallest MCU?

[Morten] works very fast. He has already designed, fabbed, populated, and tested a breakout board for the new tiniest microcontroller on the market, and heā€™s even made a video about it, embedded below.

You might have heard about this new TI ARM Cortex MO micro on these very pages, where we asked you what youā€™d do with this grain-of-rice-sized chunk of thinking sand. (The number one answer was ā€œsneeze and lose it in the carpetā€.)

From the video, it looks like [Morten] would design a breakout board using Kicad 8, populate it, get it blinking, and then use its I2C lines to make a simple digital thermometer demo. In the video, he shows how he worked with the part, from making a custom footprint to spending quite a while nudging it into place before soldering it carefully down.

But he nailed it on the first try, and honestly it doesnā€™t look nearly as intimidating as weā€™d feared, mostly because of the two-row layout of the balls. It actually looks easy enough to fan out. Because you canā€™t inspect the soldering work underneath the chip, he broke out all of the lines to a header to make it quick to check for shorts between those tiny little balls. Smart.

We love to see people trying out the newest hotness. Let us know down in the comments what new parts youā€™re trying out.

Thanks [Clint] for the tip!



from Blog ā€“ Hackaday https://ift.tt/tqpwVij

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