keychron_qmk_firmware/keyboards/gray_studio/hb85/readme.md
Felipe Coury ba11a1c807 [Keyboard] Adds Gray Studio HB85 Initial Support (#5311)
* Gray Studio HB85 Initial Support

* Fixed README image

* Updated README

* Disabled Bootmagic and Console for HB85

* Fixed Numpad 4 matrix place

* Fixes board crashing with RGB enabled

* Moved HB85 files to gray_studio folder

* Uses old i2c library since this version makes RGB underglow work

* Improved default keymap with underglow control layer

* Removes obsolete program and uses generic script instead

As per zvecr feedback

* Uses GPIO Functions to initialise and set RGB underglow PINS
2019-03-06 12:49:16 -08:00

1.9 KiB

Gray Studio HB85

Gray Studio HB85

A HitBit MSX Computer inspired Keyboard.

Keyboard Maintainer: Felipe Coury
Hardware Supported: Gray Studio HB85
Hardware Availability: Group buy finished

Make example for this keyboard (after setting up your build environment):

make hb85:default

See build environment setup then the make instructions for more information.

ps2avrGB keyboard firmware

This keyboard uses the port of the QMK firmware for boards that are based on the ps2avrGB firmware.

Note that this is a complete replacement for the firmware, so you won't be using Bootmapper Client to change any keyboard settings, since not all the USB report options are supported.

Installing

First, install the requirements. These commands are for OSX, but all you need is the AVR toolchain and bootloadHID for flashing:

$ brew cask install crosspack-avr
$ brew install --HEAD https://raw.githubusercontent.com/robertgzr/homebrew-tap/master/bootloadhid.rb
$ pip install pyusb

Then, with the keyboard plugged in, simply run this command from the qmk_firmware directory:

$ make hb85
$ bootloadHID -r hb85_default.hex

Setting the board to bootloader mode

Hold the F3 key while plugging the USB cable.

Troubleshooting

From my experience, it's really hard to brick these boards. But these tricks have been useful when it got stuck in a weird scenario.

  1. Try plugging the board in while holding the bootloader key. This will force it to boot only the bootloader without loading the firmware. Once this is done, just reflash the board with the original firmware.
  2. Sometimes USB hubs can act weird, so try connecting the board directly to your computer or plugging/unplugging the USB hub.