Steady Monkey

Atreus build part 4: Wiring the USB-C breakout board

This post belongs to the Atreus build series, which was introduced by Onward with the Atreus keyboard.

The breakout board will give a USB-C socket to the Atreus, much nicer to use than an old —though still omnipresent— micro-B socket. The breakout board I am using (from Adafruit) takes care of preparing the signals to force the USB-C end as a downstream device through a set of properly placed resistors. (Downstream devices means it must be connected to a host device, it cannot function on its own or be a host itself.)

All that is left for me to do is to strip a USB cable with a micro-B plug end that will connect the breakout board to the Pro Micro. And be mindful of the connector enclosure thickness as it must fit inside the casing, which in my case gives me 6 millimetres clearance.

Thin colored wires (red, black, green, white) soldered to a small circuit board

Soldering the four wires of USB 2.0, those wires are thin and I cut them quite short.

USB-C breakout board socket soldered to USB micro-B plug adapter

USB-C breakout board (socket) soldered to USB micro-B plug.

USB-C board and socket fitted inside wooden case with nuts holding layers

The USB-C board and socket fit nicely thanks to a couple of nuts. Considering the materials (wood does flex) and the operator’s skills, it’s as close to perfect as it can be. The outmost external nuts are holding the layers temporarily for the photo shoot.

Once that is done, the micro-B plug can be connected to the Pro Micro and the casing assembled.

Fully assembled Atreus keyboard from above showing two-keyboard ergonomic layout with dark grey and beige keycaps on wooden case

The keyboard fully assembled, with keycaps on.


Edit: And a picture of how the breakout board is tightly fitting at the edge of the casing. This gives a bit more perspective as to why the USB plug wires were cut so short.

Bottom view of keyboard upside-down showing USB-C breakout board and green Pro Micro controller mounted inside wooden case

Upside-down, bottom-up, view of the USB-C breakout board connected to the Pro Micro.

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