Arduino Pro Micro Type C

The Micro Pro uses the same ATmega32U4 processor as used on the Leonardo boards. The board has a Type-C connector and the USB interface is contained within the ATmega32U4 chip and does not require a separate USB chip like most Arduino boards which helps to keep the size small.

Spice up your DIY keyboard builds with this little microcontroller, which works with the TMK and QMK firmware. It's got 18 pins for you to work with. Note that this USB-C Pro Micro is longer than the Micro-USB Pro Micro by about 3mm.

Pretty sure any 4 pin USB C cable will work. I think 6 pin is only necessary for PD charging or Video output. just 4, the atmega in that is usb 2. As long as you're only connecting it to USB-A ports then 4 wires is fine. If you want to connect to USB-C ports then you need the CC wires as well. 10 votes, 14 comments.

Modernize your DualShock3 with a USB-C connector. No disassembly or soldering required! A minimal ESP32-S3 dev kit that is compatible with usual breadboard, featuring dual USB Type-C ports and exposing all available GPIO pins. Does this project spark your interest?

The SparkFun Qwiic Pro Micro USB C is a really cool, little development board. It's an Arduino-compatible microcontroller, micro-sized, and it accomplishes with one single chip what old Arduino Unos, Duemilanoves, and Diecimeillas could never dream of true USB functionality.

An Arduino Pro Micro, with but with a Type-C connector. Targeted as an alternative for the ubiquitous Pro Micro in DIY keyboard applications. Features Pro Micro compatible pinout. Mid Mount USB Type-C Connector. On-board reset button. Developed in conjunction with Custom KBD. Revision History 0.1 - quotElite-Cquot compatible pinout, with added ESD

USB-C versus USB Micro connectors are turning into one of the holy wars of our time. Rather than be left on the wrong side of the divide Stefan S has come up with his own USB-C version of of an

The SparkFun Qwiic Pro Micro adds a reset button, Qwiic connector, USB-C, and castellated pads to the miniaturized Arduino board!

USB-C versus USB Micro connectors are turning into one of the holy wars of our time. Rather than be left on the wrong side of the divide Stefan S has come up with his own USB-C version of of an Arduino Pro Micro to avoid having to always find a different cable.

Luckily SparkFun has readily available schematics and PCB designs for the Pro Micro store, GitHub, so exploring them and figuring out where to connect the D and D-lines is a fairly easy job.