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New Scematic capture & PCB software

New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-14 by rmustakos

Hi,  I've been dealing with the limitations of eagle for making pcbs
for a few years now, and finally hit a problem I could not resolve.  I
went searching for another program, and found kicad, an open source
system that is unlimited.  It is fairly new, and has some teething
issues, but is very usable and has a lot of potential.  It runs on
WinXX, many flavors of Linux and Solaris
There is a users group at:
<http://groups.yahoo.com/group/kicad-users/>
I am not associated with it, I just figured I'd pass it on.
Thanks,
rmustakos

Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-14 by Mike Young

What kind of problems? What does kicad do better than Eagle? What teething 
problems?

----- Original Message ----- 
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From: "rmustakos" <rmustakos@...>
To: <Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Monday, February 13, 2006 6:16 PM
Subject: [Homebrew_PCBs] New Scematic capture & PCB software


> Hi,  I've been dealing with the limitations of eagle for making pcbs
> for a few years now, and finally hit a problem I could not resolve.  I
> went searching for another program, and found kicad, an open source
> system that is unlimited.  It is fairly new, and has some teething
> issues, but is very usable and has a lot of potential.  It runs on
> WinXX, many flavors of Linux and Solaris
> There is a users group at:

Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-14 by soffee83

Thanks for the tip! I'll go grab one to check out.

I've finally gotten fairly proficient with the handful of functions 
that I need from Eagle, but have always been bothered by the limits in 
the low end of the Eagle family. I really wish they had a 100% "non-
profit" version with full functionality which was still within a 
reasonable price range for hobbyists. Last I checked, I think they 
moved up to one which would allow you a 'slightly' larger board, and 
then one for limited commercial use or something. The fifty to one 
hundred dollar range seems good for those who have absolutely no 
intention of making money off it. Seems like even with more students 
and hobbyists cutting their teeth on it, they'd get even more business 
from those who go professional.

Those "freeagle" board sizes can be a PITA, especially if you're doing 
something that really just needs space (like pots or large parts).

-George (sorry to sound like a cheap-ass)

Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-14 by Alan King

soffee83 wrote:

>Thanks for the tip! I'll go grab one to check out.
>
>I've finally gotten fairly proficient with the handful of functions 
>that I need from Eagle, but have always been bothered by the limits in 
>the low end of the Eagle family. I really wish they had a 100% "non-
>profit" version with full functionality which was still within a 
>reasonable price range for hobbyists. Last I checked, I think they 
>moved up to one which would allow you a 'slightly' larger board, and 
>then one for limited commercial use or something. The fifty to one 
>hundred dollar range seems good for those who have absolutely no 
>intention of making money off it. Seems like even with more students 
>and hobbyists cutting their teeth on it, they'd get even more business 
>from those who go professional.
>
>Those "freeagle" board sizes can be a PITA, especially if you're doing 
>something that really just needs space (like pots or large parts).
>
>-George (sorry to sound like a cheap-ass) 
>
>  
>


  That isn't just you, their licensing scheme is somewhat brain 
damaged.  Creates a sizable gap between needing hundreds of dollars to 
use it commercially, or only use it for free with no profit..  The sort 
of thing that gets come up with by those who are used to having access 
and the company they work for to buy everything for them, and not quite 
enough thinking put into it to realize others may not fit their narrow 
minded box..  Should definitely have another aspect to the limitations, 
some things simply need space even though the complexity is very low.  
It's like the people writing and selling it have never heard of anyone 
making a PCB that isn't a damn tightly packed Eurocard..

  While I don't know the orginal poster from a the next guy on the 
street, I do share Mike's skepticism on the "I've been dealing with the 
limitations of eagle for making pcbs for a few years now, and finally 
hit a problem I could not resolve."  It is likely to boil down to one of 
three options:

1.  The 'problem' is real but actually tiny, and the OP's idea of an 
'unresolvable' problem takes 5 minutes to figure out with Google.
2.  The 'problem' is imaginary, totally manufactured to stump the OP's 
agenda, paid or not.
3.  The near zero % chance of something that doesn't fall into the two 
above options.


  It's one of the least limited programs I've ever used.  A bit obtuse 
on how to do some things, but that's what Google is for.  And at least 
when you get past your own 'teething' of how to use it, it's potential 
is already largely there.  Not some far off thing you want that may 
never even be programmed in..

Also while I'm posting here's a draft from the Autorouter thread.  Not 
everything but a start on how to make the autorouter work correctly, I 
can make it do SS or SS+jumpers or DS etc with no problems at all, did 
take a month or two of playing in spare time to figure it out though..


Old draft from when Yahoo wasn't letting emails go through, but still 
some may find it useful..


Peter Harrison wrote:

>
>For My own preference, I suspect i do not know how to best direct the 
>autorouter in Eagle - too many options - and the default options are not 
>too useful. I tend to let the auto router do either just some traces 
>then hand route the rest or autoroute a board then tidy it up by hand 
>until it looks nice and satisfies any other requirements I have.
>  
>

  Isolate and identify the settings.  Reroute at each step, and pay 
attention to what the changes do, and learn what's going on when you 
change each setting.  Note that if a setting is say 5, and you change it 
to 4, does it now come right after 3, or right before 5, after all the 
other 4's?  Recognize that you have to spread the values out widely, so 
you can be in charge of what's going on, instead of letting the 
autorouter follow semi-random or arbitrarily preprogrammed preference.  
Pot luck is not conductive to having anything do what you want it to..  
Having groups of settings at 10, 20, 30, etc so you can bump things to 
29 or 31 etc and exert fine control over the weighting is absolutely 
necessary.  1-5 or 1-10 for most settings like it's originally set up 
drastically limits the possible control over the system..

  I thinik this is 95% of most people's problems with the Eagle 
autorouter, they don't mess with it enough to realize you simply have to 
spread the values to get control over the routing, and the default 
values are way too close for good operation.  Sort of a PITA to fix them 
all and figure out what the relative values should be, but necessary.  
Of course once you start seeing the most critical settings and what they 
do and start getting them in correct ranges it goes faster, the other 
settings have effect but 5 or 6 main ones control most of the action..

>It seems to me that parts placement is the real art. I don't think I 
>have adequate skills in that area.
>
>  
>
  Get good at spinning the parts by 90 or 180 degrees by the right 
button, putting the part back down, and hitting the ratsnest button to 
shorten the airwires.  Flip a part where it's practical to straighten 
the wires and you have a bus from one part to another that flips.  Tiny 
changes in placement can still produce major differences in the results, 
but it's hardly a drawback of an autorouter, it can do the same thing 
when you route manually.  You can try 10 or 20 variations in the time 
it'd take to do 2 or 3 by hand, it is not more work it is less, and you 
can get a far better job done..

  Most of my boards are relatively small and tight, and routed by hand 
for shaped routing and other things that an autorouter simply wouldn't 
be able to handle.

Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-14 by Mike Young

----- Original Message ----- 
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From: "Alan King" <alan@...>
Subject: Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software



> street, I do share Mike's skepticism on the "I've been dealing with the
> limitations of eagle for making pcbs for a few years now, and finally
> hit a problem I could not resolve."  It is likely to boil down to one of
> three options:

Well, no deep thinking on this end. I was sincerely and simply curious what 
problem he ran into that kicad with its "teething issues" did better at. I 
mostly gruff at Eagle's interface. Rather than growing on you with use, it 
grates on your patience compared to the smoothness in other CAD systems. I'm 
not really complaining, mind you. It gets the job done, and the price is 
right for my needs. I'm more like the free-loader permanently camped out in 
your living room. I spend so much time there, I want to start rearranging 
the furniture to suit my quirks.

Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-14 by rmustakos

--- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "Mike Young" <mikewhy@...> wrote:
>
> What kind of problems? What does kicad do better than Eagle? What
teething 
> problems?

The problems are what you would expect of a new program:  It has good
functionality, but the process needs to be 'tweaked'.  In eagle,
making a new component is a three step process: define part (pins),
define the package (pads), integrate the two.  
In kicad, right now, it is two step: define the part, define a
package.  This would be ok, but there is no function that QAs the
mapping from part to package, and the only feedback is some cryptic
warnings that happen in the pcb layout program when you load the net
list, and that some of your ratsnest wires don't show up.
  What it can do better is that it is unlimited size, up to 16 inner
layers, availability of source code.  Source code for autorouter is
included.  I'm not impressed with the autorouter, but I have to assume
that it mainly my fault at this point.
  It's a pretty solid package, and I have not had it core on me yet.
Thanks
rmustakos

Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-14 by rmustakos

>   While I don't know the orginal poster from a the next guy on the 
> street, I do share Mike's skepticism on the "I've been dealing 
> with the limitations of eagle for making pcbs for a few years
> now, and finally hit a problem I could not resolve."  It is
> likely to boil down to one of three options:
> 
> 1.  The 'problem' is real but actually tiny, and the OP's idea of an 
> 'unresolvable' problem takes 5 minutes to figure out with Google.
> 2.  The 'problem' is imaginary, totally manufactured to stump the 
> OP's agenda, paid or not.
> 3.  The near zero % chance of something that doesn't fall into the
> two above options.
> 
Hi Alan, nice to meet you, I'm Richard, the OP. 
The problem falls into section 3.  I'm making a PCI-104 board with a
lot of high count surface mount parts, and I need at least 4 layers,
and probably 6.
> 
>   It's one of the least limited programs I've ever used.  A bit 
> obtuse on how to do some things, but that's what Google is for.
> And at least when you get past your own 'teething' of how to use
> it, it's potential is already largely there.  Not some far off
> thing you want that may never even be programmed in..
> 
I've been happily bitching at eagle since sometime in 02, and I agree
with your assessment: it's a very capable program.  But the hard
limits on size and number of layers are hard limits.  I did RTFM, and
I am posting about kicad because of my own agenda, which is to help
other hobbiests overcome problems that have beat me up.
Kicad is free ware, I'm not a developer, I am not a seller, I am not
associated with it in any manner other than being a user, though I am
considering getting involved in the development, if I can ever get the
components to all work together in VS2005.
Thanks
Richard
P.S.  I do believe in a healthy dose of scepticism, and agree with
your list of 3 possible problems, I just always tend to be about 3
sigma, so I get to fall in section 3 most of the time.

Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-14 by soffee83

--- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, Alan King <alan@...> wrote:
>That isn't just you, their licensing scheme is somewhat brain 
>damaged.Creates a sizable gap between needing hundreds of dollars to 
>use it commercially, or only use it for free with no profit..

I've been meaning to mail them about that ever since I started using 
it. This discussion, and hearing from someone who agrees, has 
encouraged me to go ahead and do it (maybe tonight). I guess there's a 
chance that they may have just not really thought about it enough. I 
mean some of us are actually "losing" a bunch of money for our 
interest in electronics, much less having the profits to have our 
tools pay for themselves.

I may also politely suggest that they outsource a writer to finally 
redo that god awful manual. I'm sure they get that one all the time.
 Take Care,

-George

Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-14 by derekhawkins

> But the hard limits on size and number of layers are hard limits.

Doesn't $399.00 for the Layout Editor get you a 64" X 64" board size 
and 16 layers?


--- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "rmustakos" <rmustakos@...> wrote:
>

Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-14 by Alan King

>Hi Alan, nice to meet you, I'm Richard, the OP. 
>The problem falls into section 3.  I'm making a PCI-104 board with a
>lot of high count surface mount parts, and I need at least 4 layers,
>and probably 6.
>  
>
  Nope, definitely not #3.  #2.  'Problem' refers to your 'unresolvable 
problem' within Eagle.  Your problem is easily and clearly marked as is 
the solution, send in $400 for the Layout and Schematic license.  To 
short circuit the loop,  "I don't want to send in $400, or I don't have 
the $400 to send.."  Fine, that is your choice and is ok.  But in no way 
shape or form does it actually constitute an unresolvable problem within 
Eagle, as you characterized it in your OP..  It has limits, but they're 
clearly marked, and wanting to do something that goes beyond them 
doesn't even really constitute a problem with Eagle, and isn't unresolvable.

  Point being, Eagle is relatively solid and has extremely few real 
problems vs its large array of functions.  Someone taking your advice at 
point blank value is about 100 times more likely to hit a far more real, 
unresolvable problem in what you're suggesting as an alternative.  While 
it may be better if you want to do a free 4 layer board and aren't using 
advanced options, or some other rather specific thing, it is rather not 
likely to be the superior overall choice for what many people do, 
especially if it's still in some teething phase.  Once you get beyond 
learning the interface, you hit very few problems within Eagle, and 
almost any are easily worked around due to the nature of how Eagle is 
built at the lowest level.  There are plenty of valid gripes with Eagle 
and the interface, but hinting like some mysterious problem is going to 
stop people cold if they start using it isn't valid..

Alan

Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-14 by Alan King

soffee83 wrote:

>--- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, Alan King <alan@...> wrote:
>  
>
>>That isn't just you, their licensing scheme is somewhat brain 
>>damaged.Creates a sizable gap between needing hundreds of dollars to 
>>use it commercially, or only use it for free with no profit..
>>    
>>
>
>I've been meaning to mail them about that ever since I started using 
>it. This discussion, and hearing from someone who agrees, has 
>encouraged me to go ahead and do it (maybe tonight). I guess there's a 
>chance that they may have just not really thought about it enough. I 
>mean some of us are actually "losing" a bunch of money for our 
>interest in electronics, much less having the profits to have our 
>tools pay for themselves.
>
>I may also politely suggest that they outsource a writer to finally 
>redo that god awful manual. I'm sure they get that one all the time.
> Take Care,
>
>-George  
>
>  
>


  Well I was thinking more from the commercial aspect.  As it is, you 
have to come up with $600 from some other source to get the whole 
standard package and start making money.  Pretty limiting if you're 
wanting to make money from it, don't have a spare $600 laying around, 
and want to concentrate on using it..   Technically the $49 license says 
'non-profit' OR evaluation use now.  So you could evaluate it for a 
decent period, long enough to make some money and pay for it, doesn't 
really specify limitaitons.

  But it needs a $100 entry license for the larger size limitation, then 
$100/year or per $1000 income generated until you pay the $600, or 
something similar.  Or a $200 version etc, that has simple limits per 
year you can make before you need to pay the balance for the standard 
version.  As it is now makes it difficult for the very people they 
attract with the free version to progressively move to doing small scale 
commercial with it.  You have to take a huge sideways step somewhere and 
come up with the $400 or $600 to start doing more viable larger boards 
for profit, at least if you want to stay legal.  I doubt even the 
programmers or accountants have a serious problem with people breaking 
the agreement that actually intend to pay, but it seems rather dumb to 
not accomodate that lower scale end of the spectrum in the licensing 
possibilities, especially when so many of the free users might move into 
that range..

Alan

Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-14 by Codesuidae

soffee83 wrote:

> --- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, Alan King <alan@...> wrote:
> >That isn't just you, their licensing scheme is somewhat brain
> >damaged.Creates a sizable gap between needing hundreds of dollars to
> >use it commercially, or only use it for free with no profit..
>
> I've been meaning to mail them about that ever since I started using
> it. This discussion, and hearing from someone who agrees, has
> encouraged me to go ahead and do it (maybe tonight). 

If I can suggest it, perhaps you should avoid using 'bran damaged' in 
your phrasing?  ;)

I'd have to agree with the above posters.  I use the program frequently 
and wouldn't mind paying to remove or reduce the restrictions, but there 
isn't really a serious-hobbiest pricing model.

Dave K

Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-14 by Leon Heller

----- Original Message ----- 
Show quoted textHide quoted text
From: "Alan King" <alan@...>
To: <Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006 9:22 PM
Subject: Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software


> soffee83 wrote:
>
>>--- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, Alan King <alan@...> wrote:
>>
>>
>>>That isn't just you, their licensing scheme is somewhat brain
>>>damaged.Creates a sizable gap between needing hundreds of dollars to
>>>use it commercially, or only use it for free with no profit..
>>>
>>>
>>
>>I've been meaning to mail them about that ever since I started using
>>it. This discussion, and hearing from someone who agrees, has
>>encouraged me to go ahead and do it (maybe tonight). I guess there's a
>>chance that they may have just not really thought about it enough. I
>>mean some of us are actually "losing" a bunch of money for our
>>interest in electronics, much less having the profits to have our
>>tools pay for themselves.
>>
>>I may also politely suggest that they outsource a writer to finally
>>redo that god awful manual. I'm sure they get that one all the time.
>> Take Care,
>>
>>-George
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>  Well I was thinking more from the commercial aspect.  As it is, you
> have to come up with $600 from some other source to get the whole
> standard package and start making money.  Pretty limiting if you're
> wanting to make money from it, don't have a spare $600 laying around,
> and want to concentrate on using it..   Technically the $49 license says
> 'non-profit' OR evaluation use now.  So you could evaluate it for a
> decent period, long enough to make some money and pay for it, doesn't
> really specify limitaitons.
>
>  But it needs a $100 entry license for the larger size limitation, then
> $100/year or per $1000 income generated until you pay the $600, or
> something similar.  Or a $200 version etc, that has simple limits per
> year you can make before you need to pay the balance for the standard
> version.  As it is now makes it difficult for the very people they
> attract with the free version to progressively move to doing small scale
> commercial with it.  You have to take a huge sideways step somewhere and
> come up with the $400 or $600 to start doing more viable larger boards
> for profit, at least if you want to stay legal.  I doubt even the
> programmers or accountants have a serious problem with people breaking
> the agreement that actually intend to pay, but it seems rather dumb to
> not accomodate that lower scale end of the spectrum in the licensing
> possibilities, especially when so many of the free users might move into
> that range..

Easy-PC is *much* easier to use than EAGLE and costs about the same. It also 
has a decent autorouter and SPICE simulator, and support is excellent. I 
used it for about 15 years, before I got Pulsonix.

http://www.numberone.com/index.asp

Leon
--
Leon Heller, G1HSM
leon.heller@...
http://www.geocities.com/leon_heller 

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Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-14 by rmustakos

--- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "derekhawkins" <eldata@...> wrote:
>
> > But the hard limits on size and number of layers are hard limits.
> 
> Doesn't $399.00 for the Layout Editor get you a 64" X 64" board size 
> and 16 layers?
> 
> 
> --- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "rmustakos" <rmustakos@> wrote:
> >
>
  I guess, but that just changes the problem from being size and
layers to laying my hands on $399 that I can devote to this.  This is
just hobby and learning for me.  If I had someone to bankroll me, or
if I wanted to use the hacks out there that would break eagles
licensing, I could get around it.  But given my budget constraints and
my not wanting to break the law, I choose to use a free program.
  I was not telling everyone in the world to use it, and I was not
claiming it solved everyone else's problems, I was saying there is
another solution for those who want to try.  I'm kind of concerned
that you appear to be beating me down for talking about the
possibility of using something other than eagle.
Richard

Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-14 by soffee83

--- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, Alan King <alan@...> wrote:
>seems rather dumb to not accomodate that lower scale end of the 
>spectrum in the licensing possibilities, especially when so many of 
>the free users might move into that range..


Hey again Alan,

What I got to thinking later on, was that not only might that be an 
issue, but with some of us, once we move past the stage of building 
headphone amps or flashing LED circuits, we may be forced in turn to 
move past Eagle, and into something else which can accomodate us, even 
if it involves moving into an unfamiliar, less stable, or less 
powerful app. I think that with some hobbyists like myself, if I spent 
enough time learning a competing program, and it fit my needs, I may 
be unlikely to move 'back' to Eagle, if the time ever came where I 
could afford it, especially with an underdog app, which may be gaining 
popularity/features/stability and growing along with me.

Again, it makes me feel cheap every time I think of it, but even 200 
is much higher than I would feel comfortable paying, while keeping my 
electronics/PCB goals in perspective with my budget and other 
expenses.

I, personally, would prefer to see a "no commercial use" version with 
no size or part quantity limitations, but none of the features 
exclusive to production run work and muti-layer boards, which are 
likely impossible for DIY'ers. Most of the machine work and milling 
specifications which it can produce for circuit board houses, is most 
likely never going to be used here. If I fished through it, I could 
probably find a hundred other features I could say that about, many of 
which might make it impossible to use in large scale commercial 
applications. That might be a key issue to mention to them, as I have 
considered that offering a fully functioning lower priced version for 
non-profit and hobbyists, might lead to some less honest users never 
upgrading after they could afford to.

Maybe they should have just spent more time compiling a uniquely 
limited version, rather than just implementing basic limitations and 
legal restrictions.

BTW- I must have forgotten most of that licensing crap you just 
stated. Much worse than I remembered, almost "mob like". I guess I 
just looked at the dimensioning details.

-George

Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-14 by kilocycles

--- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "Leon Heller" <leon.heller@...>
wrote:
>
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "Alan King" <alan@...>
> To: <Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com>
> Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006 9:22 PM
> Subject: Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

Well, Eagle has libraries with most of the parts I've needed. When one
is missing, I've just made the devices myself, such as Mini-Circuits
SBL-1, TUF-1 and ADE-1 mixers (might get Leon's attention with
those!), and a few toroid transformers in various configurations, and
most recently, MAR-6 and MSA0385 MMICs.

It seems the other free competition either doesn't have extensive
libraries; is dated (CirCAD98); requires that you do 2-layer boards to
preclude or make it difficult to burn your own board (several board
houses that provide free development software).  And who else offers
autorouting?

The Eagle interface is non-intuitive, which lengthens the learning
curve.  I still have no idea ast to the entire feature set, but I
started using it without knowing much about it.  I made many boards
before I realized there was a "polygon gnd" command that could do a
ground foil fill.  I'm basically an ignorant plodder, rather than a
person who must understand completely before I work with something,
many times to my disadvantage.

For final board-making, I export the board as a 300 DPI image file as
a .bmp and edit it in Photoshop (the free program Paint.net, developed
at Washington State U. has layer capability, and might be a good
alternative for those who don't use Photoshop).  I even put the little
drill guide holes in manually, although I realize that if I print from
Eagle, I can print with holes.  There's probably some ulp that will do
it during the export process; I don't know.

So basically, for what I want to do, 3 x 4 inch boards are fine, and
I'm a hobbyist, not doing this for commercial purposes.  I recall on
my last visit to the CADSoft site that they have a $49 registration
fee that allows some type of commercial use; I need to go back and check.

Cheers,
Ted

Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-14 by Leon Heller

----- Original Message ----- 
Show quoted textHide quoted text
From: "kilocycles" <kilocycles@...>
To: <Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006 10:37 PM
Subject: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software


> --- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "Leon Heller" <leon.heller@...>
> wrote:
>>
>> ----- Original Message ----- 
>> From: "Alan King" <alan@...>
>> To: <Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com>
>> Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006 9:22 PM
>> Subject: Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software
> 
> Well, Eagle has libraries with most of the parts I've needed. When one
> is missing, I've just made the devices myself, such as Mini-Circuits
> SBL-1, TUF-1 and ADE-1 mixers (might get Leon's attention with
> those!), and a few toroid transformers in various configurations, and
> most recently, MAR-6 and MSA0385 MMICs.

I've created lots of RF parts for Pulsonix, including those. 8-)

Leon
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Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-14 by mycroft2152

Richard,

TANSTAAFL!

There
Ain't
No
Such
Thing
As
A
Free
Lunch!

Buy the software that you need and get on with it.

Myc




--- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "rmustakos" <rmustakos@...> wrote:
> Well, I guess you earned your salary from eagle for that post.
> You figured me out, I'm an under cover agent bent on destroying
> eagle, which we now know is the "Best And True Way", all others
> will damn you to hell fire, so don't try them.
> Thanks for trying to promote alternate ways of doing things and
> for being the defender of the One True Faith.
> I'm done with this conversation.
> Richard
>




[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-14 by Stefan Trethan

Well, i'll just throw in i use target.
It has reasonable pricing for what i needed (700 pins for 150eur), with  
which you can earn money, and i sure did.
Prices go up pretty steep from there though.

There is a english version (although it was not so great a translation  
when i last looked), and a free demo with 100pins no commercial use at  
http://www.ibfriedrich.com/.

Back then when i had to choose i selected it because i had previous  
experience from way back, and it offered a affordable version at just the  
right size i was not expecting to exceed tomorrow.

Eagle was useless for the UI and also didn't seem to have a good package  
in the range i wanted without non-profit trash.

There were some others i considered, but hey, why bother getting to know  
the faults of a new package when i already knew the peculiarities of  
target and how to work around them. There's all i need, but not much more,  
and fewer way to do things, not like orcad.

I really miss the colored ratsnest though.

ST

(And YES, i do get paid for mentioning it, well, i get a update to a new  
version cheaper. But i have mentioned it before so this post does not add  
anything, so - i do not benefit in any way, other than the satisfied  
customer stuff.. no, wait, make that the accepting reality customer stuff.)



On Wed, 15 Feb 2006 00:13:04 +0100, mycroft2152 <mycroft2152@...>  
wrote:
Show quoted textHide quoted text
> Buy the software that you need and get on with it.
>
>
> Myc
>

Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-15 by kilocycles

Well, I need to look up Pulsonix on the web.  I'm not close-minded
about this; sometimes it's just a discovery process.  Thanks, Leon.

Ted

--- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "Leon Heller" <leon.heller@...>
wrote:
Show quoted textHide quoted text
>
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "kilocycles" <kilocycles@...>
> To: <Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com>
> Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006 10:37 PM
> Subject: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software
> 
> 
> > --- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "Leon Heller" <leon.heller@>
> > wrote:
> >>
> >> ----- Original Message ----- 
> >> From: "Alan King" <alan@>
> >> To: <Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com>
> >> Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006 9:22 PM
> >> Subject: Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software
> > 
> > Well, Eagle has libraries with most of the parts I've needed. When one
> > is missing, I've just made the devices myself, such as Mini-Circuits
> > SBL-1, TUF-1 and ADE-1 mixers (might get Leon's attention with
> > those!), and a few toroid transformers in various configurations, and
> > most recently, MAR-6 and MSA0385 MMICs.
> 
> I've created lots of RF parts for Pulsonix, including those. 8-)
> 
> Leon

Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-15 by Mycroft2152

Ted,

While you're at it, check out DipTrace.

www.DipTrace.com

I was a long time (4+ years) EAGLE user, but
immediately changed over to DipTrace afte finding it.

the libraries are very large and creating new
components is a snap.

TABSTAAFL!

Myc

--- kilocycles <kilocycles@...> wrote:

> Well, I need to look up Pulsonix on the web.  I'm
> not close-minded
> about this; sometimes it's just a discovery process.
>  Thanks, Leon.
> 
> Ted
> 
> --- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "Leon Heller"
> <leon.heller@...>
> wrote:
> >
> > ----- Original Message ----- 
> > From: "kilocycles" <kilocycles@...>
> > To: <Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com>
> > Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006 10:37 PM
> > Subject: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: New Scematic capture
> & PCB software
> > 
> > 
> > > --- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "Leon
> Heller" <leon.heller@>
> > > wrote:
> > >>
> > >> ----- Original Message ----- 
> > >> From: "Alan King" <alan@>
> > >> To: <Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com>
> > >> Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006 9:22 PM
> > >> Subject: Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: New Scematic
> capture & PCB software
> > > 
> > > Well, Eagle has libraries with most of the parts
> I've needed. When one
> > > is missing, I've just made the devices myself,
> such as Mini-Circuits
> > > SBL-1, TUF-1 and ADE-1 mixers (might get Leon's
> attention with
> > > those!), and a few toroid transformers in
> various configurations, and
> > > most recently, MAR-6 and MSA0385 MMICs.
> > 
> > I've created lots of RF parts for Pulsonix,
> including those. 8-)
> > 
> > Leon
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 


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Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-15 by alan00463

--- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, Mycroft2152 <mycroft2152@...> wrote:
>
> Ted,
> 
> While you're at it, check out DipTrace.
> 
> www.DipTrace.com
> 
> I was a long time (4+ years) EAGLE user, but
> immediately changed over to DipTrace afte finding it.
> 
> the libraries are very large and creating new
> components is a snap.

I checked out the website for this product.  Maybe I'd 
consider downloading a free version to try.   But I would
never consider doing business with this outfit, since the only contact
information given on the website is email.    

You can't even tell what country, if any, the business is in.
The website is in English.   That doesn't mean anything.
The product has been in commercial release since mid 2005, 
according to the website.

Alan

Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: New Scematic capture & PCB software

2006-02-15 by Mycroft2152

Hi Alan,

Everyone has their own reasons for buying or not
buying software.

I've worked my way through too many different pcb
packages and settled on DipTrace.

It my be a "young' package, but the features and
support are excellent.

Myc



--- alan00463 <alan00463@...> wrote:

> --- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, Mycroft2152
> <mycroft2152@...> wrote:
> >
> > Ted,
> > 
> > While you're at it, check out DipTrace.
> > 
> > www.DipTrace.com
> > 
> > I was a long time (4+ years) EAGLE user, but
> > immediately changed over to DipTrace afte finding
> it.
> > 
> > the libraries are very large and creating new
> > components is a snap.
> 
> I checked out the website for this product.  Maybe
> I'd 
> consider downloading a free version to try.   But I
> would
> never consider doing business with this outfit,
> since the only contact
> information given on the website is email.    
> 
> You can't even tell what country, if any, the
> business is in.
> The website is in English.   That doesn't mean
> anything.
> The product has been in commercial release since mid
> 2005, 
> according to the website.
> 
> Alan
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 


__________________________________________________
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Tired of spam?  Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around 
http://mail.yahoo.com

Re: New Schematic capture & PCB software -- DipTrace

2006-02-15 by mycroft2152

Hi Alan,

I reposted your concerns on the Diptrace Yahoo group and got the 
following response:

<<snip
The full contact data are published on company web-site:
http://www.novarm.com/contacts
I've also placed the address of development office (where I'm working
now) to DipTrace web-site.

We publish latest news only. The first non-beta version
was released at Aug 9, 2004.

-- 
Best regards,
Stanislav Ruev                          mailto:group@diptrace.com
DipTrace Developer                        

TANSTAAFL!

Myc

--- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "alan00463" <alan00463@...> 
wrote:
>
> --- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, Mycroft2152 <mycroft2152@> 
wrote:
> >
> > Ted,
> > 
> > While you're at it, check out DipTrace.
> > 
> > www.DipTrace.com
> > 
> > I was a long time (4+ years) EAGLE user, but
> > immediately changed over to DipTrace afte finding it.
> > 
> > the libraries are very large and creating new
> > components is a snap.
> 
> I checked out the website for this product.  Maybe I'd 
> consider downloading a free version to try.   But I would
> never consider doing business with this outfit, since the only 
contact
Show quoted textHide quoted text
> information given on the website is email.    
> 
> You can't even tell what country, if any, the business is in.
> The website is in English.   That doesn't mean anything.
> The product has been in commercial release since mid 2005, 
> according to the website.
> 
> Alan
>