FreeFoote's Arbitrary Internet Home |
|
FreeFooteHome About FreeFoote Contact FreeFooteLinux ProjectsGPS Photo Correlator EXIF Utility Scripts Sound Scope LCDMenu MPG123 HTTP patch Remote Download ManagerHardware ProjectsCut down keyboard mod Sprinkler ControllerAbandoned ProjectsThe CFWAbout the CFW Background Images Next Version: CFW3 Current Version Download Email Lists Screenshots Source CodeThe F3CAbout the F3C Contribute Documentation Download |
Cut Down KeyboardWhat the ...?Sometimes, a big, fullsize keyboard is a hassel. And sometimes, a custom keyboard made from little buttons and connected to a parallel port is a hassel. And sometimes using a microcontroller is a hassel, too. And those small, custom keyboards cost so much, too! What I wanted was a small keyboard, to control a fileserver of mine. I wanted something that was easy to interface and program with. The easiest thing to program with is, naturally, a keyboard. So, I made a small keyboard. I knew what I wanted to keep, so I mapped that out. A friend and I made a day of it to make two keyboards from three others. We started with three keyboards. Disassembling these revealed one keyboard that was made from buttons soldered onto a PCB. The other two contained a small controller board and then a thin plastic matrix thing. So, we took the buttons from the PCB keyboard (because the controller components were all over the board, making it rather difficult to cut down), and took the controllers from the plastic matrix keyboards. Before we completely disassembled the plastic matrix keyboards, we mapped out what keys connected to what pins, on paper. We then got a piece of veroboard (a PCB with lots of holes, and tracks running along one dimension) and soldered all the keys we wanted, in the fashion that we wanted. After that came the fun part... attaching it to the controllers. Some nice hookup wire was used for this... and after some mucking around, we had ourselves two little keypads. Powering up the keypads resulted in a partial failure. Some keys worked, and some didn't. After some checking against the drawings we made, we found that some connections were wrong. But, never fear, a few touches with the soldering iron and we corrected those errors. Pictures of the resultHere are some pictures of the final result. I only have pictures of the little keypad I kept, and not the other one. Also, I don't have any "during" pictures, because we didn't take any. All I can show is the final result.
What did I use it for?I used it on my fileserver. See this page for information about what I did with it... Building your ownSo you want to build one too? Well, here's a few hints...
But other than that, have fun. If you make one, send me some pictures - I'd be interested to see what others did with theirs... |
| FreeFoote, aka Daniel Foote - freefoote [at] dview [dot] net |