Barrel jacks (DC-in), USB ports (Type-A, Micro-USB, and USB-C), and audio jacks.
We all love the clean aesthetics of a 60% layout. That compact, symmetrical slab of aluminum and plastic just looks right on a desk. But let’s be honest—nobody wants to live without their arrow keys, volume controls, or that one specific shortcut for your IDE. macros sprint layout 60 top
: Use the "Pad" tool to place soldering points according to the component’s datasheet (check the pin spacing/pitch). Draw the Silk Screen : Use the "Line" or "Circle" tools on the Silk Screen layer (S1 or S2) to draw the component's physical outline. : Add text labels for pins like VDD, Ground, or Output. Group and Save Barrel jacks (DC-in), USB ports (Type-A, Micro-USB, and
If you’ve ever built a 60% mechanical keyboard, you know the pain: where do you put the macro keys? Most 60% PCBs sacrifice dedicated macro columns for compactness. But what if I told you that with and a little creative routing, you can pack a macro cluster on the top row of a standard 60% board? But let’s be honest—nobody wants to live without
To save time, don't place keys one by one. Create a row macro .