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Aurora Sweep PCB Kit

SKU AUR-SWP-BMK-010

Selecting the right parts for your kit is easy with our new kit Composer.

Original price €24,75 - Original price €28,88
Original price
€34,94
€28,88 excluding sales tax
€24,75 - €28,88
Current price €34,94
€28,88 excluding sales tax
List price includes 21% Dutch sales tax. It will be adjusted to your local tax rate during checkout.
Switch compatibility: MX Hotswap
Carbon-neutral shipping with Shopify Planet
Carbon-neutral shipping on all orders

The Aurora Sweep is a redesign by splitkb.com of the popular Sweep (Sweep Bling MX) by David Barr and contributors. The original project is open source. For every kit sold, splitkb.com will donate €1 across the firmware projects we support.

What's the Aurora Sweep?

The Aurora Sweep is a minimalist layout with only 34 keys. It's a very compact, lightweight and portable board. The original Sweep is based on Pierre Chevalier's Ferris, to make it support Pro Micro and compatible controllers.

Features

The Aurora Sweep supports the following features:

  • A minimalist layout with 34 keys;
  • Powered by QMK or ZMK firmware;
  • Support for MX (see remarks) or Kailh Choc (v1 sold at splitkb.com, not v2) switches;
  • MX spacing for all variants;
  • Top mounted controllers for a lower profile;
  • Up to two 128×32 pixel OLED displays;
  • Up to two EC11 rotary encoders per half in two of four possible positions (marked by white circles);
  • Per-key RGB backlight by individual RGB LEDs;
  • Underglow by individual RGB LEDs;
  • Support for a power switch for wireless controllers;
  • Support for the splitkb.com tenting puck.

What's included?

Every kit includes:

  • 1 × Left PCB;
  • 1 × Right PCB;
  • 65 × 1N4148 axial signal diode;
  • 5 × 4k7 Ohm axial resistor;
  • 2 × PJ-3200B-4A TRRS Jack, black, and;
  • 2 × Reset button.

The Choc Hotswap kit includes SMD diodes and SMD resistors instead of axial ones.

If you get a hot swap kit, the kit will also include:

  • 36 × Kailh Hotswap socket in either Choc or MX, black.

What's required?

Beyond the kit contents, you'll also need to get the following items to make a working keyboard:

If you're getting the hand solder kit and are going to use Choc switches with a conductive case (like aluminium or FR4 plates), you'll also want to get a set of SMD diodes. You won't be able to clip the legs of axial diodes short enough to avoid accidental shorts.

What's optional?

And lastly, you can get these options to add some bling to your keyboard:

What is the Aurora Series?

The Aurora series were designed as a homage to open source keyboard kits that have carved their space into the community. Kits that provided something new and unique, kits that resonated with the community and that have both received and have given a lot of love in return.

With the Aurora series, we aim to make these kits available to the community in a way that both honors the original, while also offering the best possible feature set and a consistent, well-documented build experience.

For each kit sold, we give back to the community by donating €1 across the firmware projects we support. This way we support open source projects and benefit everyone using keyboards, whether they use our kits or their own.

Build Guide

Check out the Aurora Build Guide on our documentation site.

Remarks

The Sweep is the only kit in the Aurora Series where the PCB outlines (edge cuts) deviate from the open source version. In order to fit the OLED window, we expanded the controller area with 2.54mm. It's a little bigger than the original Sweep, and as such isn't fully case compatible. The mounting holes are still the same, however.

The LEDs on all Aurora kits are north-facing. This means they'll light up any legends that may be on your keycaps nicely, provided they're translucent. The caveat of this, is that Cherry-profile keycaps (such as by those by GMK) may interfere with the switch housing. Other keycap profiles together with MX-style switches, along with Kailh low profile choc switches, are all not affected.

If you use Kailh Choc low profile switches, you can't use a rotary encoder. There won't be enough space for the encoder's legs between the top plate and the PCB. If you're very inclined, though, you can work around this by modifying the plate files and having your own plates cut, or by modifying a store-bought plate with a tool like a file or Dremel.

This kit can't use the JST jack from the Wireless Expansion Kit, which you'd use with a nice!nano. It's simply too small! You can solder the battery leads directly to the dedicated pads, though.

Read More

There is extensive documentation available on most aspects of this keyboard. Have a look at these resources to start with:

The case and keycaps shown are not included with this item. This product includes the PCB kit only.