Thinking of moving from 'slap a '#RaspberryPi Pico onto a PCB' to 'design a custom 2040 board with a chip on it'.
I spotted this book - Design an RP2040 Board with KiCad by @concretedog. Has anyone got it? Opinions?

Context: Last time I did a PCB, I used Fritzing. I don't think that that was such a good idea, but it worked.

@recantha using KiCad is an art. It's relatively easy to learn, and getting your first PCB from #oshpark is not too hard (and rewarding). Designing for low-cost prototype services is more difficult. Using the correct design rules, using supplier component databases, balance default components with special components (if available), label them correctly, double- and triple-check orientation of, e.g., diodes...

Having an up-to-date guide certainly saves time (or money).

@concretedog

@tg9541 @concretedog Thanks for answering. I want "just" enough to do it at a hobbyist level without killing myself with stress. Is that even possible with KiCad?

@recantha
Recipe for a low-stress KiCad experience:

* start with a simple circuit on a reasonably large 2-layer PBC (e.g., 100x100mm²)
* follow a basic walk-through tutorial
* use through-hole components where possible (maybe with few simple 1.27mm pitch SOIC)
* don't allow feature creep
* use the default settings of a PCB prototype
* use budget shipping, be patient

https://www.pcbway.com/
@concretedog

China PCB Prototype & Fabrication Manufacturer - PCB Prototype the Easy Way

@tg9541 thanks Thomas! 🙂