SparkFun will be closed Nov. 28th and Nov. 29th in observance of Thanksgiving. Any orders qualifying for same day shipping placed after 2:00 p.m. MST on Wednesday, Nov 27th will be processed on Monday, Dec 1st. Wishing you a safe and happy holiday weekend from all of us at SparkFun!
Have you ever wanted to build your own mechanical keyboard, but you don't know where to start? Maybe you're a keyboard hacker extraordinaire and you're looking for a handy development platform. Either way, we designed the Qwiic Keyboard Explorer for you.
The Qwiic Keyboard Explorer is a 14-key mechanical keyboard kit based on our Qwiic Pro Micro development board. On its own, it makes a conveniently sized programmable macro pad, but we've also included plenty of prototyping space along the top for experimenting with all kinds of keyboard peripherals. If soldering isn't your thing, take advantage of the Pro Micro's Qwiic connector to attach any board from our Qwiic ecosystem! The standoff holes surrounding the prototyping area are spaced to accommodate most Qwiic boards for convenient mounting.
The kit comes with everything that you need to build the keyboard as pictured, including Cherry MX Blue keyswitches and translucent black keycaps. The only thing you need to bring to the party is your solder and soldering iron. Check out the Arduino example code to get started with programming your keyboard with custom macros!
We welcome your comments and suggestions below. However, if you are looking for solutions to technical questions please see our Technical Assistance page.
No reviews yet.
I had some problems with the example code provided so I wrote my own Arduino library. Feel free to use my SwitchMatrixScanner Arduino Library on Github
What technique did you use to attach / solder the Pro Micro to the main PCB? Would you please post a pic?
This question is also in the Forum: https://forum.sparkfun.com/viewtopic.php?f=123&t=54943
I followed the guide here: https://learn.sparkfun.com/tutorials/how-to-solder-castellated-mounting-holes