Not using OLEDs? Skip ahead to Case Assembly.
Soldering your OLED display
If you’re using OLED sockets, please skip to the next section on this page.
The components on the bottoms of OLED displays are conductive, and can touch with the pins on your keyboard’s controller.
To prevent shorts from happening, causing weird behavior and possibly damage, cover the bottom of your OLED display with non-conductive tape.
Insert the OLED display from the top of the PCB. You can use a piece of electrical or scotch tape to hold it in place.
Flip the board around and solder one single pin of the display.
Flip the board around again and check whether the OLED is aligned straight, both horizontally and vertically: so check from the top as well from the side of the keyboard.
If it’s not aligned properly, heat up the single solder joint and move the display around until you’re happy with how it looks.
Solder the other three pins.
Protective foil. The display has a protective foil layer on it, with a pull tab. You can pull on that pull tab from the top of the display to remove it after you’re done assembling the keyboard (and before putting on your case’s OLED cover window).
Socketing your OLED display
If you just soldered your OLED display, please continue to the next page.
The components on the bottoms of OLED displays are conductive, and can touch with the pins on your keyboard’s controller.
To prevent shorts from happening, causing weird behavior and possibly damage, cover the bottom of your OLED display with non-conductive tape.
When using sockets, you could just insert your OLED into them, but it’d be too tall to fit underneath the OLED cover of the case. For that reason, we’ll go trim about 1.5mm off of the OLED’s legs using flush cutters.
Hold the leg with one hand while you clip it with the other - you don't want a rogue leg flying into your eyes!
You can’t trim the legs back on, so you can always start with a tiny bit, see how far the OLED goes into the sockets, and then trim a little more until you’re satisfied. The sockets are about 4mm deep, so that’s the length of leg that needs to remain at least.
After trimming the legs, you can insert the OLEDs into the sockets, and you’ll be all done for the next step!
Protective foil. The display has a protective foil layer on it, with a pull tab. You can pull on that pull tab from the top of the display to remove it after you’re done assembling the keyboard (and before putting on your case’s OLED cover window).