Skip to content

Flex PCB breakout for Bluetooth, USB, GameCube controller ports on trimmed Wii motherboards

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

loopj/periphlex

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

12 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Flex PCB breakout for Bluetooth, USB, GameCube controller ports on trimmed Wii motherboards

Why?

Building a Wii portable requires trimming a Wii motherboard and relocating key peripherals such as USB, Bluetooth, and GameCube controllers. This design breaks out these peripherals from the front of the board to a low-profile FFC connector, allowing for more modular builds.

The board is designed to be semi-permanently installed by soldering to exposed traces for the USB and Bluetooth data lines, and to the vias for the GameCube ports.

Features

  • Solders directly to the top of a Wii motherboard
  • 14-pin FFC low profile connector fits cleanly underneath heatsinks/plates
  • Fits within the footprint of all but the most aggressive Wii trims
  • Breaks out frequently used peripheral lines
    • Bluetooth data
    • USB data
    • GameCube controller data (x4)
    • Reset GPIO (via magnet wire)
    • Soft shutdown GPIOs

BOM / Ordering

  • Grab the Gerber files for the latest release
  • Order a 2-layer, 0.5oz copper flex PCB from JLCPCB, PCBWay, Gold Phoenix, or similar
  • Purchase a Molex 503480-1400 connector (DigiKey, Mouser)
  • Purchase a 14 pin, 0.5mm pitch FFC cable of desired length

Installation

  • Solder the FFC connector to the flex PCB
  • Line up the 4 GameCube vias in the middle of the PCB with the GameCube vias on the front of the Wii motherboard, and tape into place
  • Mark the position of the holes for Bluetooth and USB using a fine sharpie through to the Wii motherboard
  • Remove the flex and inspect the marks, they should be over the traces
  • Carefully expose the traces for Bluetooth and USB at the marked locations
    • Use a fine craft knife or dental pick to scratch the solder mask off the correct trace
    • Be careful to not expose the neighboring trace
    • Clean the exposed traces
  • Line up the PCB with the GameCube vias again and tape into place
  • Solder the following vias on the flex to the motherboard
    • The four GameCube vias
    • The Bluetooth and USB vias (to the exposed traces)
    • The POWER GPIO via (P)
    • The GND via at the top right of the "X" of the logo
    • The GND via to the right of the connector
  • Solder a magnet wire from the "R" pad to the Reset via on the opposite side of the board
  • Solder a magnet wire from the "S" pad to the SHUTDOWN GPIO via on the opposite side of the board
  • Test for continuity, and secure in place with CA glue or kapton tape

Installation tips

  • Remove any excess soldermask from the vias on the motherboard you'll be soldering to
  • Pre-tin the vias first
  • I like to tin the bottom of the corresponding vias on the flex
  • Use lots of flux

FFC Pinout

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
USB- USB+ GND GC4 GC3 GC2 GC1 GND BT- (Data 2) BT+ (Data 1) GND S Pad R Pad POWER GPIO

Pin 1 is the right-most pin on the FFC, indicated with a dot.

Don't forget that these pin numbers will likely be reversed on the opposite end of your FFC cable, depending on the connector/cable you use.

Future enhancements

  • Could potentially also break out the USB1 data lines in future

License

Permissively released under the Solderpad Hardware License v2.1

About

Flex PCB breakout for Bluetooth, USB, GameCube controller ports on trimmed Wii motherboards

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks