I’ve recently spent some time getting familiar with the Intel Edison. The Edison has a dual-core 500MHZ Intel Atom processor, with built-in Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. It comes with 1GB of RAM, 4GB of eMMC internal storage, and a USB 2.0 OTG controller. It doesn’t bring any of the connectors (power or signal) out in a usable form. Rather, it’s designed to be plugged onto another board through a 70-pin high density connector from Hirose.
I designed a small board with I2C (both 5V and 3V connectors) and a micro-SD card slot. My board still doesn’t have the power or console connectors. For that, I’m using a base board from Sparkfun.
Figure 1Step one of the assembly process, is, of course, to design and layout the board. Using the Sparkfun open source designs as a jumping off point, I ended up with the nice, compact layout (1.2″ x 1.75″) shown below in Figure 2.
Figure 2After getting the files ready and placing a turnkey order on our website, I followed the board through with my camera. Here it is after offline setup, with the parts ready for robot pick-and-place:
Figure 3In one of our Mydata My500 solder paste printers:
Figure 4On the pick-and-place machine, with solder paste, but before any components are placed:
Figure 5The parts plate in the machine:
Figure 6
With most of the components placed:
Figure 7Through the reflow oven, prior to final inspection:
Figure 8The final product, top view:
Figure 9I abbreviated the process a bit, but those are the major process steps along the way.
Duane Benson
Happy birthday (month) Nikola Tesla