![An electric ecosystem](../assets/oshpark_logo-394b5d59990e1feb769d201a1bca154982ac9b9d165f54cb25f119d5d3262aee.png)
OSH Park
Zoomieleven driver
- You need to sign in or sign up before continuing.
Zoomieleven driver
by![](../../gravatar.com/avatar/45ded6aa8bc63ea7c9b62a1580b4f8efea98.jpg?s=16)
2
layer board of
0.45x0.45
inches
(11.40x11.40
mm).
Shared on
April 14th, 2017 12:44.
I made this driver to fit in a tiny zoomable keychain flashlight I found at Lowe’s Home Improvement. The flashlight comes with a cheap LED on a PCB, and no driver. It uses 4 button cells to power the LED directly. There is a clicky switch in the tail of the flashlight. It’s the smallest zoomable I’ve ever seen, and probably the smallest flashlight I’ve ever seen with a clicky switch. Since there is no driver, with a single PCB containing only the LED, I decided to make this driver board with all the driver components on one side and the LED pads on the other side so that it would be a drop-in solution. This driver is made to be small, but still have direct-drive level power output to the LED. OSH Park requires a 15mil distance to the dimensional outline to be free of copper so I padded the board by that much around the edge. If you sand down to the edge of the copper pour, this board will be 11mm diameter. That is the diameter I need for the flashlight that I have in mind for this board. This driver uses the 10 pin Atmel Tiny13a MMU chip and a LFPAK33 FET. The LED footprint is made for any CREE XP or similar LED.