Hi, I am back on the development workbench after an lengthy absence for health reasons. Now that I am coding again I am enjoying it and slowly the ideas and competency is returning. it is good exercise for a 'lazy' brain

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Was there any further progress on developing WBUS prototyping boards as discussed previously in this thread??
Before I was rudely interrupted, I acquired some WBUS connectors, got some PCB's made and I have now built up some 'prototype' prototyping boards:
1. A single tile sized board that brings out all 20 WBUS connections, has a 0.1" spacing prototyping section, on board RGB Led and i2c interface (including pull up/down resistor space). You'll all know the vagaries of i2c buses I'm sure - inconsistent?
2. A DIP28 sized board with:
i. a WBUS connector to fit to the DIP28 (parallel to the DIP28
ii. 3 WBUS sockets for tiles
iii. WBUS connections on 0.1 SIL connector (allows further expansion and is perpendicular to the DIP28)
iv. LED/i2c plus an Address jumper block
v. a control relay (to switch external power in most cases) - this may be replayed with an opto-isolated solid state switch arrangement.
3. A DIP28 sized board with WBUS on 0.1 SIL connector and a larger 0.1 grid prototyping are (1, 3 and 4 hole strips)
The idea was to replicate the DIP68 functionality (multiple WBUS connections) but allow the use of the DIP28 for power options & management (which is lacking on the DIP68) and allow further WBUS expansion depending on what sensors are being developed. For example, some gas sensors require a heating element with power requirements well above what the PYBD can provide, higher voltages too. In the end, the final results of any end device, will use a 'Lego block' expansion concept. the long DIP68 board is OK but is an awkward size to encompass in a product design, especially where size is a critical factor - a block seems easier than a strip format for most of the development I undertake, especially as some sensors are quite large.
These prototyping boards satisfy my needs right now, but will need scaling down and resizing to pretty them up, but the prototyping space is great (soldered or pin/socket as required - which is what I prefer during development but once ready for construction, build the same thing hard soldered.
Have any other such devices been built? or developed to a ready for sale state? For me, he hardest part in getting the PCB's up and running, was the WBUS connectors fixing and placement but the PYBD product line was fairly new when I started.