The Engineering Behind Valveβs new VR Headset
Valveβs new Steam Frame is what all the well-connected YouTubers are talking about, but most of them are talking about what itβs like to game on it. Thatβs great content if youβre into it, but not exactly fodder for Hackaday β with one exception. [Gamers Nexus] gives us a half hour of relatively-unedited footage of them just chatting with the engineers behind the hardware.
Itβs great stuff right from the get-go: they start with how thermal management drove the PCB design, and put the SoC on the βbackβ of the chip, sandwiched betwixt heat pipes. We donβt usually think of taking heat through the PCB when building a board, so itβs a neat detail to learn about before these things get into the hands of the usual suspects who will doubtless give us teardown videos in a few months.
From there wanders to power delivery β getting the voltage regulators packaged properly was a challenge, since impedance requirements meant a very tight layout. Anyone who has worked on this kind of SBC might be familiar with that issue, but for those looking in from the outside, itβs a fascinating glimpse at electrical sausage being made. Thatβs just the first half.
The heat-regulation conversation is partially repeated the next conversation (which seems to have happened first) where they get into the cooling requirements of the LCD screens. This requires less than you might think, as they like to run warm for fast refresh. Itβs really more about keeping your face cool. They also they discuss acoustic vibration β you donβt want your integrated audio shaking your IMUs apart β and why the prototype was being blasted with freakinβ laser beams to monitor it.
If you havenβt seen or read any other coverage on the Steam Frame, youβre going to miss some context here, but if youβve not hid under a rock for that announcement, this is amazing detail to have. Weβre hugely impressed that Valve let their engineers out of their cubicle-cave to talk to media.
Sure, itβs not an open-source VR headset, but compared to the deafening silence coming from the likes of Meta, this level of information is still awesome to have.