Yozh & RubyCircuit
Yo Yozh, heard you’re into customizing decks – what if we wired a small sensor array into a board to log traction and vibration? I can make the PCB and you can test it on the streets. Sound good?
Sounds sick! I’ll grab my board, hop on the grind, and let the data do its thing – bring that PCB over and we’ll crank up the streets together. Let’s ride the numbers!
Nice. Drop the board here, and I’ll hook it up to a 5‑V supply, put a 3‑channel ADC in the mix, and fire a micro with a tiny 4‑byte data log per hit. We’ll keep the firmware at 12 kB so it fits on an ATmega328. Bring the parts, I’ll handle the PCB. Let’s make the streets talk to us.
Yo, that’s fire! I’ll swing by with the board, crank it up, and we’ll get the streets talking in real time. Bring the parts, I’ll get my gloves on – let’s do this!
Sounds solid. I’ll prep the footprint and pick a 12‑bit 10 kΩ ADC breakout so the firmware stays tiny. Bring the board, and we’ll swap the parts on a bench soldering station. Get those gloves ready – soldering is a real precision sport. Ready when you are.
Yo, bring that board over, I’m all set with my gloves. Let’s hit the bench and get this precision grind on!
Drop the board by the bench, and I’ll lay the components out. I’m setting up the AVR dev kit now. Once the parts are in place, we’ll run a test loop and pull a sample trace. Stay focused – the tighter we stack, the more data we can cram in. Let’s keep it clean.
Got the board right here, champ. Let’s stack it up, keep that clean line, and hit the test loop – can’t wait to see those traces pop!