qmk_firmware/keyboards/sixkeyboard
jrdsgl f0dc206784
[Keyboard] Update sixkeyboard VID/PID (#12345)
Co-authored-by: Ryan <fauxpark@gmail.com>
2021-04-02 20:44:06 -07:00
..
keymaps adding personal keymaps (#11952) 2021-02-20 13:29:08 -05:00
.noci Exclude more keyboards from CI (#11436) 2021-01-13 08:12:28 -08:00
config.h [Keyboard] Update sixkeyboard VID/PID (#12345) 2021-04-02 20:44:06 -07:00
info.json
matrix.c Removes Erez personally from QMK (#5883) 2019-05-15 19:53:45 -04:00
readme.md
rules.mk Trim firmware sizes from default rules.mk, part 3 (#8045) 2020-01-30 11:13:49 -08:00
sixkeyboard.c
sixkeyboard.h

Techkeys SixKeyBoard

Keyboard Maintainer: QMK Community
Hardware Supported: Techkeys SixKeyBoard PCB
Hardware Availability: Techkeys

Make example for this keyboard (after setting up your build environment):

make sixkeyboard:default

See build environment setup then the make instructions for more information.

Hardware Info

The schematic is like this:

 switches       leds
,--+--+--.   ,--+--+--.
|C7|B7|B5|   |C6|B6|B4|
+--+--+--+   +--+--+--+
|D6|D1|D4|   |D5|D2|D3|
`--+--+--'   `--+--+--'

The LED on the bottom is C4. All 7 of the leds are turned on when the keyboard boots-up in the sixkeyboard.c file - backlight_enable is not required. The MCU is an Atmega16u2, so the flash memory is limited to 0x3000 bytes - the current setup uses just about all of that! I'm sure things can be opitimised a bit.

There is a jumper on the bottom of the board (next to the USB port) that serves as a reset button - I drilled a hole in my case to allow for quick access via a screwdriver/metal object.