> On Oct 25, 2018, at 10:05 AM, Al Kossow via cctalk
> wrote:
>
>
>
> On 10/25/18 9:48 AM, Al Kossow via cctalk wrote:
>>
>>
>> On 10/25/18 9:18 AM, Guy Sotomayor Jr via cctalk wrote:
>>> Now that I think about it, a flying probe may be easier for us hobbyists to
>>> construct. The tric
On 10/25/18 9:48 AM, Al Kossow via cctalk wrote:
>
>
> On 10/25/18 9:18 AM, Guy Sotomayor Jr via cctalk wrote:
>> Now that I think about it, a flying probe may be easier for us hobbyists to
>> construct. The trick will be getting sufficient x/y resolution and not
>> having the two probes in
On 10/25/18 9:18 AM, Guy Sotomayor Jr via cctalk wrote:
> Now that I think about it, a flying probe may be easier for us hobbyists to
> construct. The trick will be getting sufficient x/y resolution and not
> having the two probes interfere when the two probes are close to each other.
>
I ha
On 10/25/18 9:18 AM, Guy Sotomayor Jr via cctalk wrote:
> I’m wondering if a “bed of nails” could be built that would allow for
> automated scanning of the traces to at least get the netlist.
yup
that's the latest iteration of what I'm working on
16 bit open drain drivers, low voltage compa
> On Oct 25, 2018, at 9:02 AM, Jon Elson via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> On 10/25/2018 12:44 AM, Chuck Guzis via cctalk wrote:
>> On 10/24/18 8:06 PM, Jon Elson via cctalk wrote:
>>
>>> Hmmm, you COULD actually use a schematic tool to do this! Maybe create
>>> the components to look like DIPs. I k
On 10/25/2018 12:44 AM, Chuck Guzis via cctalk wrote:
On 10/24/18 8:06 PM, Jon Elson via cctalk wrote:
Hmmm, you COULD actually use a schematic tool to do this! Maybe create
the components to look like DIPs. I know I could do this in Protel 99
without a great deal of trouble. Then, just draw
On 10/24/18 11:51 PM, Guy Dunphy via cctalk wrote:
> - ICs containing multiple functional blocks (eg 6 x inverters.) These may be
> used all over
>the place in a schematic. You don't want to be forced into drawing them
> together at any
>stage of schematic derivation.
Actually you d
On Thu, 25 Oct 2018, Guy Dunphy wrote:
Keep the objective in mind. What you want to end up with is a schematic,
that is laid out in a way that aids comprehension of how the circuit
works. Typically this means overall left to right functional or power
flow, with separate functional blocks visual
At 10:06 PM 24/10/2018 -0500, you wrote:
>On 10/24/2018 04:25 PM, Al Kossow via cctalk wrote:
>> To draw out the schematics for the Displaywriter I have a bunch of boards to
>> trace out,
>> and I don't want to do the usual "scribble on yellow pad"
>> to do it. Has someone written a graphical tool
On Oct 24, 2018, at 2:25 PM, Al Kossow via cctech wrote:
> What I would like to find is a tool that puts up a bunch of footprints with
> internal IC functions
> shown, then a way to rapidly enter the buzzed out interconnections,
> generating a netlist.
>
> This is exactly backwards workflow f
On 10/24/18 8:06 PM, Jon Elson via cctalk wrote:
> Hmmm, you COULD actually use a schematic tool to do this! Maybe create
> the components to look like DIPs. I know I could do this in Protel 99
> without a great deal of trouble. Then, just draw in all the wires.
> I suspect a few other good sch
On 10/24/2018 04:25 PM, Al Kossow via cctalk wrote:
To draw out the schematics for the Displaywriter I have a bunch of boards to
trace out,
and I don't want to do the usual "scribble on yellow pad"
to do it. Has someone written a graphical tool for doing this?
What I would like to find is a too
On 10/24/18 5:41 PM, Guy Dunphy wrote:
> A: Yes. But god knows what it costs.
>
> http://scancad.net/products/pcb-design-fabrication/pcb-reverse-engineering
> ScanFAB is a fully integrated, stand-alone, scanner- based re-engineering
> system that permits the creation of CAD data (DXF/Gerber/D
At 02:25 PM 24/10/2018 -0700, you wrote:
>To draw out the schematics for the Displaywriter I have a bunch of boards to
>trace out,
>and I don't want to do the usual "scribble on yellow pad"
>to do it. Has someone written a graphical tool for doing this?
>
>What I would like to find is a tool that
I've gone through this a few times myself. There are a few approaches.
One is to use a schematic tool like Kicad to place all the ICs first, then
add the wires and rearrange things as you buzz out the connections.
Another approach uses an intermediate step where you enter all the buzzed
out conne
To draw out the schematics for the Displaywriter I have a bunch of boards to
trace out,
and I don't want to do the usual "scribble on yellow pad"
to do it. Has someone written a graphical tool for doing this?
What I would like to find is a tool that puts up a bunch of footprints with
internal IC
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