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Hardware Drop

Bitflip Zero One

The first space qualified board you can actually buy.

Bitflip Zero One is the first board from our flight MCU line that made it out of the vacuum chamber. Built for abuse in pressure rigs and thermal tests, then made small enough for your desk.

Built for orbit. Sold for benches. Contact us to get flight qualified units while we finish the checkout flow.

Catalog only release. Message us to buy one.

Bitflip Zero One hero from the high side angle
Bitflip Zero One detail view showing blink indicator
Bitflip Zero One full top hero render
Bitflip Zero One top-down render with context
Bitflip Zero One full bottom hero render
Bitflip Zero One silk detail
Bitflip Zero One low side angle hero

Specs and delivery

Everything you need to drop a flight grade MCU into your next project. No carrier boards. No guesswork.

  • ATSAME51 MCU with 1MB ECC SRAM sandbox.
  • 16 MB onboard storage.
  • 33 GPIO outputs and 5 configurable serial ports (UART, SPI, I2C or custom).
  • Up to 15 analog inputs and 2 DAC outputs.
  • Rear mounted CAN header for system integration.
  • Dual watchdogs and hardware fuses.
  • 31.2 × 61.2 mm PCB that fits in your palm.
  • Delivered with anti static sleeve and pin map card.

Resilience built in

Hardware decisions lifted straight from our payload boards and tuned for the bench.

Flight grade DNA

Hard gold, redundant clocks, and routing taken straight from our payload boards. No decorations. Just resilience.

Debug access that respects your sanity

SWD, I2C, UART, and CAN placed where your hands expect them. No twisting, no guesswork, no excuses.

Power stage that refuses drama

Consumes less than 500 mW and keeps rails steady through resets, cold starts, and general chaos.

Why we built it

Because why the hell not. Bitflip Zero One started as an avionics module that we froze, pressurized, and shook until everything else in the rig broke. It survived every test, so we built more.

It’s the same hardware logic we use in our test flights, just made easier to hold. No stripped down version, no watered down parts, just the real board.

We wanted to see what happens when flight level reliability meets maker accessibility. Turns out, something good.

Like handling a flight computer that shouldn’t be on a desk. It boots clean, handles power swings without panic, and logs faults like it means it. Once you’ve used it, everything else feels like a toy.

Bitflip Zero One laid out on the desk

Orbital spin test

Zero gravity. Zero shame. Just vibes.

Bitflip Zero One survives vacuums pressure rigs thermal swings and the emotional fallout of prototype week. Letting it float in place for a spin is the closest thing it gets to a vacation. It spins like it is trying to remember what planet it is on and honestly it has every right.

The look is accurate. Matte soldermask crisp gold pads and no filters anywhere. What you see here is the same stubborn little slab of electronics that lands on your bench after surviving more thermal cycles than most of us survive deadlines.

Turntable footage straight from the render workstation.