Here is a tiny 4-pin Qwiic 1mm JST connector. This connector is used on all of our Qwiic-based boards and can be used to create your own I2C-based device compatible with the Qwiic system. Additionally, this connector will mate with all of our Qwiic cables with a solid lock.
The SparkFun Qwiic connect system is an ecosystem of I2C sensors, actuators, shields and cables that make prototyping faster and less prone to error. All Qwiic-enabled boards use a common 1mm pitch, 4-pin JST connector. This reduces the amount of required PCB space, and polarized connections mean you can’t hook it up wrong.
This skill defines how difficult the soldering is on a particular product. It might be a couple simple solder joints, or require special reflow tools.
Skill Level: Competent - You will encounter surface mount components and basic SMD soldering techniques are required.
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It's a Qwiic connector... what can I say? The second time I used my Artemis Nano, the connector ripped off (it was already loose), so I replaced it with this that I had fortunately bought alongside it. I'll probably get a few more for various sensors and boards that fail. The issue is that the two main solder points can become detached from the plastic socket, leaving it only connected by the four tiny surface mount pins.
Are these connectors available in a through-hole version?
I believe that the SZ series might have a compatible part, but it is only available from one distributor on octopart, and there is no CAD symbol I've seen, or even any pictures available besides the mechanical drawings.
I'd love it if SFE had those, with a compatible footprint. I don't trust my hand soldering on these.
Yeah, I've run into trouble hand-soldering them. I can hand-solder the four signal pins with a little bit of care, but I can't figure out how to solder the two mounting pins, which are necessary to hold the connector in place. The mounting pins are recessed inside the plastic housing, and there is very little exposed area, so I can't manage to get a soldering iron in there to heat the mounting pins without melting the housing.
would you be able to use a standard 4 pin jst connector instead?
JST connectors come in a ton of different sizes and types. As long as your connectors are 1mm JST-SH series connectors, they should fit these sockets.