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Subject: Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] What software is in use?

From: John Johnson <johnatl@...>
Date: 2004-03-25

Eagle works great for me. You can start off with basic schematic/board
editing.
As your skills and needs grow, you can get into more advanced things
like
editing the parts libraries, writing scripts and ULPs, etc.

It's an excellent tool, and I feel privileged that they make a
free version available.

Regards,
JJ

On Thursday, Mar 25, 2004, at 00:25 US/Eastern, emailw8nf wrote:

> I've been a lurker on here for a while. I haven't seen much
> discussion of the layout software we experimenters like to use.
>
> The last time I did any "volume" of homebrew PCBs, I just used
> something like Microsoft Paint!
>
> But now, it seems there are many freeware or demoware software
> packages available for this work. I'm curious what people tend to
> use, and what the particular benefits are of the package chosen?
>
> I've been using QCAD - has its ups and downs. Good news it can output
> a Gerber file, which can then be manipulated in any Gerber viewer, and
> printed/zoomed, etc. Also it ties together the schematic and the PC
> board, so once you're done with the schematic, you go to layout, move
> the parts around, and place traces to satisfy the rat's nest. But a
> lot of this is clumsy, and doing re-work is very tedious. It's also
> very time-consuming to create anything other than 90 degree straight
> lines with any accuracy. For those of us who are trying to roll out
> PC boards for things like 300 watt UHF amplifiers, that limitation can
> be a killer.
>
> What do others use?
>
> Kindly,
>
> Dave
>
>
>
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> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Homebrew_PCBs
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