Difference between revisions of "Build a Zynthian"

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=== TFT ===
 
=== TFT ===
  
Time for connecting thesuitable main-ribbon-cable with the (female) 40-pin-connector onto the Hifiberry. At the end of the cable is a (female) 26-pin-connector. This one must be connected onto the PiTFT. If you have a clone PiTFT which has no suitable port you have to solder one or use a gender changer. The original PiTFT has both versions of connector.
+
Time for connecting the main ribbon-cable using the (female) 40-pin-connector to the Hifiberry. At the other end of the cable there is a (female) 26-pin-connector. This one must be connected to the PiTFT. If you have a clone PiTFT which has no suitable port you have to solder one in or use a gender changer. The original PiTFT has both male and female connectors.
  
 
=== 2in1 ===
 
=== 2in1 ===

Revision as of 14:36, 5 October 2016

1 How to build a Zynthian (Prototype-3)

Manual is currently in development! (20150406)

1.1 Disclaimer

No guarantee for nothing. You do everything on your own risk!

1.2 Prerequisites

Want to join the Zynthian community? No problem! Building your own Zynthian is not very difficult. If you get trouble you can contact us at support@zynthian.org or via the blog http://blog.zynthian.org.

1.2.1 Required competences

For building the hardware you should have the following competences:

  • Soldering
  • Basic understanding of reading electronic circuit diagrams
  • Enjoyment of work with electronic hardware and parts

1.2.2 Tools

  • Screw drivers
  • Soldering iron
  • Tin-solder
  • Side cutter
  • Magnifiying glass

1.3 Hardware

1.3.1 Bill of Material

Here is a list of the hardware components you will need to build the Zynthian device. I also provided links to my suppliers and the prices I paid for the components in February 2016. I bought everything from Germany, so all descriptions are in German and prices are in EUR. If you live in another country maybe you'll get things even cheaper.

No Shipper Order no. Description Pieces Price per piece [€]
1 http://www.reichelt.de 1N 4148 Planar Epitaxial Schaltdiode, DO35, 100V, 0,15A 1 0,04
2 http://www.reichelt.de 6N 138 OPTOKOPPLER 1 0,58
3 http://www.reichelt.de RASPBERRY PI 2 Raspberry Pi 2, 4x 900 MHz, 1 GB RAM 1 37,50
4 http://www.reichelt.de RPI HB DAC+ RCA HiFiBerry DAC+ RCA, Raspberry Pi Shield 1 35,90
5 http://www.reichelt.de 1/4W 220 Kohleschichtwiderstand 1/4W, 5%, 220 Ohm 1 0,10
6 http://www.reichelt.de 1/4W 1,0K Kohleschichtwiderstand 1/4W, 5%, 1,0 K-Ohm 1 0,10
7 http://www.reichelt.de 1/4W 10K Kohleschichtwiderstand 1/4W, 5%, 10 K-Ohm 1 0,10
8 http://www.reichelt.de MKS-02 100N WIMA Folienkondensator, Rm 2,5mm 100nF 4 0,15
9 http://www.reichelt.de GS 18P IC-Sockel, 18-polig, superflach, gedreht, vergold. 1 0,32
10 http://www.reichelt.de GS 8P IC-Sockel, 8-polig, superflach, gedreht, vergold. 1 0,19
11 http://www.reichelt.de SL 2X25G 2,54 2x25pol.-Stiftleiste, gerade, RM 2,54 1 0,24
12 http://www.reichelt.de MAB 5S DIN-Buchse, 5-polig 1 0,24
13 (OPTIONAL) http://www.reichelt.de NTA 176 6,3 Mono-Klinken-Bu. auf Cinch-St. 2 0,35
14 http://www.reichelt.de NT MUSB 2 SW Micro-USB Steckernetzteil, schwarz, 5 V, 2 A 1 8,40
15 http://www.segor.de MCP23008-E/P MCP23008 8 port I2C-GPIO extender 1 2,10
16 http://www.amazon.de Adafruit PiTFT 2.8" Adafruit PiTFT Touchscreen Display, 2,8 Zoll, für Raspberry Pi Computer 1 32,00
17 http://www.ebay.de 12mm Rotary Encoder Switch Rotary Encoder with switch, 20 steps 4 0,60
18 http://www.ebay.de Poti knob Poti knob for Rotary encoder (Pos. 17) 4 1,50
19 http://blog.zynthian.org Encoder PCB PCB for encoders 2 10,00
20 http://blog.zynthian.org 2in1 PCB PCB for MIDI and GPIO extension 1 10,00
21 http://blog.zynthian.org Main Bus Ribbon Cable Raspberry Main Bus Ribbon Cable 1 20,00
22 http://blog.zynthian.org Mini-ribbon cable Mini-ribbon cable (6 pin female connector to 6 female jumper connectors 3 3,00
23 http://www.saturn.de SD card Samsung 32GB SD card 1 14,00
24 - Short connector cables Connector cables pin-female/pin-female for MIDI and external GPIO connector from 2in1 board 4 ??,??
25 - Multi-pin connector 1x40pol.-Stiftleiste, gerade, RM 2,54 1 ??,??

Notes:

  • Pos. 19-22 were ordered directly from Zynthian.
  • There is no case in this BoM - You have to build your own.
  • Total price was 200,27 € (plus shipping).

Zynthian Parts.jpg

1.4 Assembly and Soldering of the PCBs

1.4.1 Step 1: 2in1 board

1.4.1.1 You need:

  • 1 * 2in1 PCB (Pos. 20)
  • 2 * 100nF capacitor (Pos. 8)
  • 1 * multi-pin 2 pins wide (part of pos. 24)
  • 1 * multi-pin 6 pins wide (part of pos. 24)
  • 1 * multi-pin 8 pins wide (part of pos. 24)
  • 1 * resistor 10 kOhm (brown-black-orange-gold, pos. 7)
  • 1 * resistor 1 kOhm (brown-black-red-gold, pos. 6)
  • 1 * resistor 220 Ohm (red-red-black-gold, pos. 5)
  • 1 * diode 1N4148 (pos. 1)
  • 1 * IC socket 8 pins (pos. 10)
  • 1 * IC socket 18 pins (pos. 9)
  • 1 * IC 6N138 (pos. 2)
  • 1 * IC MCP23008 (pos. 15)
  • 2 * Connector cable pin-female/pin-female
  • 1 * MIDI socket (DIN socket 5 pins)
  • 1 * 2in1 PCB (pos. 20)

2in1 Parts.jpg

1.4.1.2 HowTo:

  1. Start with assembling the diode onto the PCB. Be careful to do this the right way - the small black (or white) stripe on one side of the diode must fit the same side of the white stripe on the PCB!
  2. After that solder the resistors.
  3. Then assemble the IC sockets, but do not fit the ICs yet. We will do this at the end of this task.
  4. After that, solder the capacitors and the multi-pin-rows.
  5. Now insert the ICs into the socket. Be careful to put them with the notch on the IC towards the hole of the white rectangle showing on the PCB!

2in1 Solo.jpg

For the MIDI socket you have to cut off one side of the female/female cable and solder this side to the DIN-socket. Connect the cables to pin 5 (2nd from left) and pin 4 (2nd from right).

MIDI-socket Solo.jpg

1.4.2 Step 2: Encoder boards

1.4.2.1 You need (for one Encoder PCB):

  • 2 * Rotary Encoder with switch (Pos. 17)
  • 2 * 100nF capacitor (Pos. 8)
  • 1 * multi-pin 6 pins wide (part of Pos. 24)
  • 1 * multi-pin 2 pins wide (part of Pos. 24)
  • 1 * Encoder PCB (Pos. 19)

Encoder Parts.jpg

1.4.2.2 HowTo:

  1. Notice! Due to the mounting of the encoders on a front panel, the 6-pin-row must be soldered from the bottom of the PCB (pin numbering will be 1..6 from the lower side of the PCB!). The picture below shows the WRONG component side! (newer images will follow)
  2. The order of the following steps is not important: Solder the capacitors, the 2-pin-rows and the Encoders on the board (on the upper side) - that's it.
  3. You have to do this twice - you need two encoder boards.

Encoder Solo.jpg

Alternative: Mount the pin row at the bottom of the PCB:

Encoder-Pins-Down.jpg

1.4.3 Step 3: Pin row on the Hifiberry

1.4.3.1 You need:

  • 1 * HiFiBerry DAC+ RCA, Raspberry Pi Shield (Pos. 4)
  • 1 * 2x25pol.-Stiftleiste, gerade, RM 2,54 (Pos. 11)

Hifiberry parts.jpg

1.4.3.2 HowTo:

  1. For this part you should have some time. It will be very worse when damaging the Hifiberry!
  2. First of all: cut the 2*25 pin-row to 2*20 pin (perhaps with a cutter).
  3. Place the pin-row on the Hifiberry and start to solder on the back of the Hifiberry. I used to solder pins which are not next together to avoid hot spots. You also can pause some time for cooling down the area you soldered last.

Hifiberry Solo.jpg

1.4.4 Checking everything

Congratulations - half the way done!

Now you should double-check everything you soldered:

  • Were the components soldered in their correct orientation (e.g. polarity, pin layout)?
  • Are there any solder bridges between pins? Remove them!
  • Is the diode on the 2in1-PCB correctly oriented?
  • Are the ICs showing the right direction?
  • Are all pins of the ICs in their socket?

Hints:

  • Use the magnifying glass and bright light for checking.

1.5 Connecting the cables

1.5.1 You need:

  • 1 * Raspberry Pi 2 (Pos. 3)
  • 1 * HiFiBerry DAC+ RCA (Pos. 4)
  • 1 * Adafruit PiTFT Touchscreen Display, 2,8 Zoll (Pos. 16)
  • 1 * Raspberry Main Bus Ribbon Cable (Pos. 21)
  • 3 * Mini-ribbon cable (6 pin female connector to 6 female jumper connectors(Pos. 22)
  • 2 * Connector cables pin-female/pin-female (Pos. 24)

TFT Raspi and Hifiberry.jpg PCBs and cables.jpg

1.5.2 Raspberry Pi and Hifiberry DAC+

Put the Hifiberry DAC+ onto the Raspberry Pi. With the Hifiberry there come 4 distance pieces and 4 screws (all plastic). Put them together as shown in the following picture.

Raspi and Hifiberry.jpg Raspi+Hifiberry.jpg

1.5.3 TFT

Time for connecting the main ribbon-cable using the (female) 40-pin-connector to the Hifiberry. At the other end of the cable there is a (female) 26-pin-connector. This one must be connected to the PiTFT. If you have a clone PiTFT which has no suitable port you have to solder one in or use a gender changer. The original PiTFT has both male and female connectors.

1.5.4 2in1

The 2in1-PCB must be connected using one of the mini-ribbon cables. The 6-pin connector must be located towards the PCB. Pin 1 is on the left bottom (component side up). On the other end of the cable are 1-pin female connectors. They must be connected onto the following pins on the (male) 40-pin-conenctor in the middle of the main-ribbon cable.

Wire no. Function GPIO no. Pin on Raspi no.
1 Vdc 3.3V 3.3V 1
2 RxD RxD 10
3 I2C SDA1 08 3
4 I2C SCL1 09 5
5 Vdc 5V 5V 2/4
6 GND GND 6/9

Cable-schema-2in1.png

Next connect the DIN socket (MIDI) onto the 2in1-PCB. The connector on the PCB is the 2-pin one located on the upper right of the PCB.

Wire no. Function MIDI-IN pin no.
1 MIDI-IN-5 5 (MIDI connector: 2nd from left)
2 RxD 4 (MIDI connector: 2nd from right)

1.5.5 Controller

This is a little bit tricky. Depending on you setup it maybe useful to put the 6-pin-row on the back of the PCB. So you can front mount the encoders. I haven't done this: I used to bend the 6-pin-row by 90 degree. The original Zynthian does this not - so the pin counting is changed!


Looking on the top of the PCB with the 6-pin-row down:

  • Mounting the 6-pin-row on top of the PCB: Pin counting starts on the left of the row!
  • Mounting the 6-pin-row on the back of the PCB: Pin counting starts on the right of the row!

There some encoders that has reversed the pin order, so you have to change A and B pins.

1.5.5.1 Controller 1

Wire no. Function GPIO no. Pin on Raspi no.
1 Enc1-B 25 37
2 Enc1-A 27 36
3 Enc1-SW 23 33
4 Enc2-B 26 32
5 Enc2-A 21 29
6 GND GND 30
Wire no. Function Pin on 2in1
1 GND -
2 Enc2-SW X07

1.5.5.2 Controller 2

Wire no. Function GPIO no. Pin on Raspi no.
1 Enc1-B 04 16
2 Enc1-A 03 15
3 Enc1-SW 02 13
4 Enc2-B 00 11
5 Enc2-A 07 07
6 GND GND 14
Wire no. Function Pin on 2in1
1 GND -
2 Enc2-SW X08

Cable-schema-Controller.png

1.5.6 Alternative cabling

An alternative cabling can be done with an old floppy ribbon cable. You won't need the 3 minni-ribbon-connectors (6-pin) but have to solder 6-pin connectors on the floppy cable (40-pin-ribbon). The cabling plan is the same as above.

Zynthian Floppy ribbon cable1.jpg Solder a 6-pin connector

Zynthian Floppy ribbon cable2.jpg 6-pin connector for the 2IN1 is ready

Zynthian Floppy ribbon cable3.jpg The complete cable ready for installation

Zynthian Floppy ribbon cable4.jpg Cable installed

1.6 Creating the SD

1.6.1 Getting the Image

Currently the image is only available via torrent:

Download torrent link (sha1sum: 0067db634260e45f50467c1f90c322187a182872)

1.6.2 Writing the image to the SD card

If you got the whole image you can write it to an SD-card. Depending on your OS you have to choose how to create the SD-card. You need a minimum size of 16GB, better 32GB for more sample-sets in future. There is a really good manual for this at | https://www.raspberrypi.org/documentation/installation/installing-images/.

1.7 First boot

1.7.1 Testing

1.7.2 Something won't work?