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Grbl shield

Assembled v2 board

This repository contains the KiCad design files for a grbl shield. It is intended to for an Arduino Uno running grbl, to connect it to external stepper drivers, limit switches and other equipment. The reason for developing this shield, instead of using an existing shield, is that this shield has filtering applied to the limit pins to allow more robust operation in a noisy environment (at Fablab Amersfoort, our limit switches were picking up noise from the parallely running spindle power wires). Other than that, this is a trivial PCB, that just connects pin headers to the Arduino pins.

The repository contains the KiCad design files for the board, under "Releases" in github we also have pre-generated gerber files to use. We have a few spare boards from our own order, which you can order through tindie.

Grbl pinout

This shield supports both the old (0.8) and new (0.9) Grbl pinout. The difference is that the limit Z and spindle enable pins are swapped, and the latter is repurposed to a spindle PWM pin. For the spindle, switching layouts is a matter of use the right connector (SPIN_EN or SPIN_PWM), but for the z limit pin, a solder jumper needs to be soldered in either position (since there is also a filter attached).

Ground connections

The shield connects all three Arduino ground pins to the ground plane. Ideally, you would use only one pin to prevent ground loops, but I wasn't sure which one to use. The one above the digital pins is very close to the limit pin connector and filter, but looking at the Arduino Uno schematic, there is quite some distance and some vias between that pins and the microcontroller. The other two ground pins have a better connection to the microcontroller, but are further away from the limit pins. For now, all of them are connected, if this causes problems, we could try disconnecting some ground pins.

SMD capacitors

The shield uses SMD components for the filter capacitors, to minimize the distance (and inductance) from the filtered pins and the capacitors. To simplify the layout, the resistors use through-hole versions instead.

In the prototype, 22nF was used, but in the final design these were replaced by 10nF because that was what was available.

Empty components

A number of components on the limit pins are left empty (NC) in the schematic. Initial testing shows these shouldn't be needed, but if further problems crop up, they could be used to improve the stability of the design by adding smaller pullup resistors (Arduino Uno internal ones are fairly big at 20k-50k), or adding a second filter capacitor of a different size.

Single-sided layout

The original layout was made for single-sided milling on a CNC mill, so the design does not use any vias. The v1 board was produced like this, v2 was slightly modified for 2-layer commercial production (but it should be easy to make it single-sided again).

License

This design is made available under the CERN Open Hardware License, version 1.2 or above. See LICENSE.txt for the full text of the license.