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💡 Join 1,000 teenagers and make your first PCB with a $100 grant!

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OnBoard - Get a $100 grant and make a PCB!

"I’m so glad that young people can create things like PC boards online. May your creativity have no limits!”

Steve Wozniak, Apple co-founder

It's easier than ever for high school students to get involved with programming; all you need is a computing device and internet access. Yet, it's not the same for hardware. While PCB fabs have greatly increased the accessibility for professionally done boards, there is still no clear way for high school students to jump in. This is where OnBoard comes in.


Every student will receive up to $100 to cover PCB manufacturing costs, and join a community of peers– some more beginner and some more experienced.

Requirements

Every design/submission needs to meet the following constraints to be approved:

  • Unique and open-source design
  • Must be orderable on JLCPCB or other approved vendor
  • Must be in high school or younger123 and show proof of school enrollment to submit

Getting Started

Star the repo (Optional)

To follow the repo for updates and show you're participating, click the "star" button on the onboard repo.

Star the OnBoard repo

1. Join #onboard on Slack!

Our #onboard channel is where the party is getting started! If you haven't already joined, make sure to add yourself to the channel. And for those who are new to the Hack Club slack, sign up to our community of 13k+ makers through here (don't worry, there isn't an application).

Perhaps ping a little hello to @Kevin Yang?

2. Design a Board!

It's design time! If you've done this before, you can skip ahead to step 3. Most people reading this will be new to PCB design, so we've made a simple tutorial on making an example board.

Check out our PCB tutorials, where you'll make a design from scratch in a free online editor. This is jumping in the deep end- it won't explain everything, but it will give you a taste of what's possible. By the end you probably won't understand what you did or why you did it, but you will have a working design for a board and you'll know how to tweak and edit the design to make it your own.

If you get stuck on these tutorials, or want more example projects to learn from, post in the Slack channel to hear from others going on their journeys.

3. Upload to a Vendor and Take a Screenshot

Upload your Gerber files to JLCPCB.com and add them to you cart. JLCPCB is the default PCB manufacturer, but you can shop around 3 if there's a specific one you want to use 4. Once completed, take a screenshot with all the final costs and shipping!

If you're curious what all the settings are about or how to order for assembly, check out our ordering_from_JLCPCB.md doc! To avoid excess shipping fees or customs, check out the Shipping Tips doc!

It should look like this:

Note: Your screenshot is VITAL since your project cannot be approved without it. You'll include the screenshot in your PR later.

4. Fork!

Fork the onboard repo! This is the where you'll add your project files and eventually PR from!

Fork the OnBoard repo

5. Add Your Design to Your Project Repo

From your fork of OnBoard, create a folder with your project name under OnBoard/projects. To do this, go to the projects folder and click Create new file.

Projects folder

Create new file

Then in the box labeled name your file..., type in PROJECT_NAME/README.md. This creates a README file under a folder called named after your project.

Creating a folder

After this, copy and paste the contents of TEMPLATE.md into the text editor and fill it out!

Paste in TEMPLATE.md

Once your done, press the big green Commit changes button to save!

With your README filled out, head over to add files to begin uploading your Gerber, design files, and screen shot of vendor approval.

Upload gerber files

In all, you should have the following files under your project folder:

  • README.md: A filled out TEMPLATE.md, renamed to README.md
  • cart.png: A screenshot of your order details
  • gerber.zip: This should be the file that you send off to the vendor.
  • schematic.pdf: Export the schematic from your EDA program as a PDF
  • src/: Design files in a folder called src. Whatever format your designer outputs should be included.
    • The files might look like SCH_name.json and PCB_name.json for EasyEDA
    • Or name.kicad_pro, name_kicad_sch, and name.kicad_pcb
    • Or design.json, design.sch, design.brd, etc.

If you have all the above, you're done with this step!

6. Create a PR!

Once you've uploaded your files, you can merge them to the main repo through a pull request! Under the contribute tab of your forked repo, click the big green Open pull request.

Open a PR

That will bring you to the main repo, where you'll initiate a pull request. Follow the checklist, we'll then review your PR and you'll be off to the races!

Submission checklist

7. Get approval and order your board!

Once you submit your PR, it needs two approvals:

  • One verifying your high school enrollment documents, from HCB.
  • Another one from the engineering team, checking that your design follows the grant requirements.

These reviews typically take 24-48 business hours if everything is correct. Then we merge your PR!

After your PR gets merged, it takes up to 24 business hours for you to receive an email from HCB with a virtual credit card. Make sure to check your spam folder. Then, you can order your board!

8. Ship it!

Post photos of your board in #onboard! We can't wait to see what you make!

John sharing PCB

Example Projects

Footnotes

  1. Home school still counts!

  2. If you left high school early you can also submit.

  3. If you need help with ideas for proof of age, ask in our Slack and we'll help you out! here 2

  4. If outside the US you may be charged customs which aren't covered by the grant! Check beforehand.

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