# D48 ![Proton C based handwired 40% keyboard](https://i.imgur.com/2wCYuno.jpg) A Proton C based handwired 48 key keyboard with 2 rotary encoders, I2C OLED, WS2812 strip, buzzer & clock! - Keyboard Maintainer: Andrew Dunai - Hardware Supported: Proton C handwired Make example for this keyboard (after setting up your build environment): make handwired/d48:default ## Details - Proton C based handwired keyboard - 2x custom 1.25mm stainless steel plates - Kailh Choc White (clicky) - 2x rotary encoders - 0.91" 128x32 I2C OLED - Small buzzer mounted inside (still waiting for the AST1109MLTRQ boys) - WS2812 strip (14 LEDs) - DS1307 I2C module real-time clock Build process: [album](https://imgur.com/gallery/zZZGdDw) ## Pinout ![D48 pinout](https://imgur.com/QoStCvD.jpg) ## Challenges I'm very happy with the result, but at some point Proton C was driving me nuts. I did a lot of trial and error during assembly & programming. There were a lot of *yet* undocumented caveats, so I'll outline them here so that you guys can avoid the same issues I had. ## Matrix & encoders Although this is a 48-key board with a 12-col & 4-row matrix, I've decided to add an extra row above the first one to make my matrix 12x5 and wire encoders' push buttons as 2 extra keys, thus making it a total of 50 (12x4 + 2 encoders). I used 2 columns (9 & 12) for those buttons. So, a first row actually has 2 buttons on columns 9 & 12 (because encoders are located near those columns). Encoders' push buttons are also configured via QMK's keymap. Check out the `d48.h` & `config.h` for pins used & keymap macro definition. ## I2C/OLED Most of the stuff worked out of the box, except me choosing the right pins for my OLED. On the Proton C pinout, there are 3 labels for I2C and for some reason there are 2 pairs of SDA/SCL for I2C1 channel: `B8`/`B9` (rear left side) and `B6`/`B7` (rear right side). I'm not sure if this is a mistake or if I was doing something wrong. So initially I picked `B8`/`B9` which were not working. When I switched to B6/B7, things worked like a charm. Later I used B9 for matrix row. No issues so far. Oh, and by the way, while using `B8`/`B9`, keyboard was sometimes *swallowing* quick keypresses. I believe this was due to I(2)C timeouts (because incorrect pins were used for OLED). ## Buzzer It turns out once you switch on `AUDIO_ENABLE`, you cannot use A4 & A5 because they interfere with the buzzer. My guess is that buzzer uses DAC channels (not sure why both). I couldn't find this in documentation. Honestly, Proton C has almost zero documentation and this was the biggest challenge. Anyway, apart from almost going crazy from those challenges, I really liked it! ## RGB I used pin `A15` for my WS28128 RGB strip. ## D1307 real-time clock Connecting DS1307 RTC was a piece of cake: same I2 pins as OLED (SDA/SCL), GND to GND and power to Proton C VUSB pin (5v). ## Other issues - `B5` could not be used for matrix. - `TAP_CODE_DELAY` had to be increased to 10 to fix `tap_code(KC_VOLU/KC_VOLD)` calls being swallowed in encoder callback. - Be extremely attentive about the pinout: keep in mind that **the official Proton C pinout displays the rear of the board, not the front.** Being used to front pinouts, I ended up soldering entire matrix to the wrong side, so I had to desolder every wire and connect it to the opposite side. ## Conclusion I had a lot of fun. The layout was inspired by the Planck THK. Feel free to ask any questions!