Hello NXP community,
I have been a using the lpc-link2 development board for a project that I have been working on for the past 3 years. Recently I have found it difficult to purchase more of this dev board (it is a bit old at this point) but am still keen to continue working with the lpc4370 chip.
I am planning on mostly replicating the link2 using the lpc4370, and have been referring to the schematic file provided online. However I am wondering if it would also be possible to get access to PCB layout files? Or are these considered IP / trade secret?
I also wonder how other companies distribute PCB files for manufacturing their dev boards, as I believe the same Arduino board designs are manufactured by a range of companies, for example. Or am I mistaken...?
Cheers,
Quinn
已解决! 转到解答。
See attached files. This was a design I did about 5 years ago. (I removed some of the branding/names). There are the Altium files as well as .pdfs of the schematic, gerbers, PCB notes, assembly drawings, etc.
This was built as a castellated via module. It was to intended to be a highspeed digitizer for an ultrasonic signal. It was built/prototyped with some software development. No known issues but use at your own risk. I only checked the interfaces that were critical to our experiment. Should be enough to get you started.
You might want to check with Embedded Artists. The did the design of the board.
https://www.embeddedartists.com/products/lpc-link2/
I have a very simple design for a castellated via module that uses the LPC4370. The format is Altium Designer.
-Eli
Hi Eli,
Thanks for your prompt response. I have emailed embedded artists so hopefully they will be kind enough to share their files.
Would you be comfortable sharing your design? My main concern is designing for a 100 bga chip, which I have not done before. I wonder about track width/spacing and how many layers I will need. There should be plenty of resources online to help with this too.
Regards,
Quinn
See attached files. This was a design I did about 5 years ago. (I removed some of the branding/names). There are the Altium files as well as .pdfs of the schematic, gerbers, PCB notes, assembly drawings, etc.
This was built as a castellated via module. It was to intended to be a highspeed digitizer for an ultrasonic signal. It was built/prototyped with some software development. No known issues but use at your own risk. I only checked the interfaces that were critical to our experiment. Should be enough to get you started.
BTW: Feel free to reach out via email if you need layout help. It would be possible to it pinned out on 4 layers, you just might have to eat into your internal reference planes. 6 gives you some breathing room. I didn't need all of the IO so it this one ways done on 4. The low cost services like JLCPCB can easily handle the required geometries, etc.