Arduino Shields v2

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Contributors: jimblom, El Duderino
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Installing Headers (Assembly)

Step 1: Insert All Four Headers

Plug all four headers into the shield. Make sure you insert them in the correct direction. The male pins of the header should enter the top side of the shield and extend out the bottom. This orientation is of utmost importance. Don't solder anything until you've got the headers going the right way!

Headers inserted, not yet soldered

Headers inserted, aligned as well as possible, ready to solder.

With the headers inserted, flip the shield on its top-side to rest on the black, female side of the headers. Hopefully you've got a nice flat workspace to lay it on. Try to align all headers so they're precisely perpendicular to the shield PCB.

Step 2: Solder One Pin On Each Header

Finally it's soldering time! It's important that each of the headers is at a nice, 90° angle to the PCB. This will ensure that the shield slides straight onto your Arduino and you won't have to bend any pins in doing so.

In order to guarantee that each header is straight start by soldering just a single pin on each. That way if they're at a weird angle it will be much easier to re-heat just a single pin while adjusting the alignment.

Soldering the first pins

One pin down, one in progress, two to go. Soldering one pin on each header.

Four solder joints down, only 24 (to 28) to go!

Step 3: Check Header Alignment

With those four pins soldered, try plugging the shield partially into your Arduino to test the header's alignment. Make sure your Arduino is not powered while you do this alignment check.

Alignment check

Temporarily plugging the shield in to check that all pins line up.

Does everything line up? No pins bending? If not, find the guilty header and try to re-align it. Warm the joint back up with your iron, and slightly move and adjust the header alignment. Also, be careful when pulling the partially soldered shield out of the Arduino. Since all the headers are not soldered, you could easily bend them as you pull it out of the Arduino's female headers.

Step 4: Solder All Remaining Pins

If your headers are all lined up, you can attack the remaining unsoldered header pins. When you're done, you should have 32 shiny volcanoes of solder.

Shield with all headers soldered

That's a beautiful sight. Everything's soldered up.

Step 5: Check For Shorts or Cold Joints

With everything soldered, double check for bad solder joints. Did any of your joints stray into another creating a short? If so, you can take some solder wick to the joint, or just try re-heating the short and "pushing" the solder where you want it.

Shorted solder joints

Well, that's just egregious! Watch out for shorted solder joints like that.

Also check for cold solder joints - a joint that's got some solder on it, but isn't quite connecting the two solder points together. Cold joints aren't always the easiest to see; look out for joints that aren't as shiny, or pins that still seem loose.

Cold solder joint

That last pin could use a bit more solder. It doesn't quite look like a connection's been made.

To fix a cold joint, re-heat the solder on the pin, and add just a bit more.

Step 6: Plug It In!

It's usually best practice to power down (unplug) your Arduino before you connect a shield to it. Hopefully all of the pins are still well-aligned and the shield just slides right into the Arduino. Take care not to bend any pins while inserting, and make sure they all go into their mating female headers.

The Ardumoto Shield plugged into  a SparkFun RedBoard.

That satisfying feeling as the shield slides straight into your Arduino