Crocodile Clips (CROCCLIP) 64 Bit
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After connecting the crocodile clips you can get on with setting up the board, but it is a bit of a faff. The power connection is a bit of a pain in the backside, as you need to use a small screwdriver to pop the header open and then put a crocodile clip into the header and tighten it down with the tiny screwdriver. Then you need to use another, larger screwdriver to pop the crocodile clip out of the header. It takes a bit of time to get going, and is a bit fiddly, but it is really easy once you get it open and tight.
The bottom side of the board has the ground contact and the 3V power contact. The ground contact has a small pad, then a wide pad, then a crocodile clip pad, and then a small pad. Making the crocodile clips work is a bit trickier, because the crocodile clips need to go on the opposite side to the crocodile clips. I went for a makeshift solution, by making some crocodile clips out of a banana plug, the top end of the banana plug is trimmed to about 3mm thick, and then folded back on itself so it's the size of a crocodile clip. I bent the clip so the crocodile clip pad was facing down and put the banana plug on, then just bent it back on the other side. The crocodile clip pad is then held down and squeezed onto the crocodile clip and it will hold.
The top of the board has the I2C address lines for the address lines with a diamond-shaped pad for crocodile clips. The I/O lines, on the right-hand side of the board are large pads, while the left-hand side has the I/O lines. There's a multi-way surface-mount socket for crocodile clips on the left of the board, then on the right is a standard surface-mount male-female header with straight pins for crocodile clips. Connecting to the crocodile clips is easy, just bend the clip at the correct angle so the exposed pin faces the crocodile clip way and then gently push it in.
The two-step micro:bit kit contains a micro:bit, a pair of crocodile clips and a pair of banana connectors, a pair of LabJack DSP (Digital Signal Processor) development boards to read and write the micro:bit via SPI, and a USB-to-serial cable. Everything you need for a bit of basic micro:bit development.
The kit is supplied with an 8mm (±0.3mm) spacing breadboard, a 3V power supply, a set of crocodile clips, and a female header for the crocodile clips. Being a panel-mount case there is no mounting board included, just the case itself and the breadboard.
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