Electrical Engineering Asked by Joel B on December 15, 2021
I’m working on a board where I will need to mechanically enable/disable some functionality/portions of the hardware. I would like to have the functionality of a DIP switch (see below) but it feels so 1980s.
It seems out of place next to all my ultra-miniature leadless package parts. Has anyone come across anything more “modern” looking and that won’t require me to use a fine-tipped pen to switch?
Additional Info
I think the solder bridge will probably work fine if they are not changed that often.
However, I think the DIP switch would be the easiest and most reliable option. Just in case you weren't aware there are SM DIP switches available that are not too "1980's" (IMHO) and don't take up too much room:
The 8-way one shown above is from this page, it's ~11mm long and not too pricy at £0.96 for one.
Answered by Oli Glaser on December 15, 2021
Because your board will be used by internal engineers and infrequently changed, I suggest a solder-based or track-cutting solution.
A pair of pads on your PCB make a fine switch, and there's nothing that could be cheaper. Touch it with your soldering iron and some solder, and you've made a connection. Touch it with the iron and some braid and you've disconnected it.
If you want it to default to 'on' and you're using stencil + reflow soldering, just add some paste over the whole area and it will short during reflow.
Sparkfun's library has a few examples, they look like this:
They can be quite small; an 0402 resistor footprint works fine for this purpose and takes up far less space on your PCB than a DIP switch.
Answered by Kevin Vermeer on December 15, 2021
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