[sdiy] Love for LTSpice
Joe Grisso
jgrisso at det3.net
Sat May 27 11:01:59 CEST 2017
I also love LTSpice - I remember attending a training session in which the
author of LTSpice went over a bunch of the features. One of the nifty
things he showed was a Philbrick tube op-amp being simulated. I do have to
admit though, after seeing the ability to place the waveform cursor at
specific points on Paul Schreiber's demo video, I'm looking at TINA more
and more.
-J
On Fri, May 26, 2017 at 3:32 PM, Mattias Rickardsson <mr at analogue.org>
wrote:
> > On 05/26/2017 08:18 PM, Tim Ressel wrote:
> >>
> >> Hey,
> >> I just wanted to say what a great tool LTSpice is.
>
> I agree! Very useful - but with a lot of annoyances that you learn to live
> with.
>
> On 26 May 2017 at 21:10, Nils Pipenbrinck <n.pipenbrinck at hilbert-space.de>
> wrote:
> >
> > Also it will give you no idea how noisy your design is.
>
> Unless you use its noise simulation function? O:-)
>
> > It's great for learning and trying out ideas fast, but before designing a
> > pcb, prototype and measure everything you've simulated.
>
> I haven't actually needed to make dedicated prototypes of sub-circuits,
> the simulated circuits tend to work almost completely as in the
> simulations. It's important to know its limitations though, agreed!
>
> /mr
>
>
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--
Joe Grisso
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