Design tools Was: Mystery IC: Allen Bradley 314B102
Jay Jaeger
cube1 at charter.net
Sat Dec 19 10:24:24 CST 2015
On 12/19/2015 9:33 AM, Todd Goodman wrote:
> * Noel Chiappa <jnc at mercury.lcs.mit.edu> [151218 17:38]:
>> > From: Brent Hilpert
>>
>> > I need to move to something newer but I haven't evaluated current
>> > schematic-drawing programs
>>
>> Dave Bridgham got me started with KiCAD, and that seems like a pretty good
>> system to me. It has separate sub-systems for schematic capture; circuitry
>> checking; netlist generation; PCB layout; etc, etc. I've only worked with the
>> first three, but it seemed pretty good for them.
>>
>> > I'm a little concerned they won't provide the degree of control or
>> > finesse I like
>>
>> Well, you'll have to try it and see, but it's pretty customizable: they
>> provide libraries of common components, but it has a nice component editor
>> for drawing up new ones (or customizing the ones it comes with).
>>
>> Component location and line routing (in the schematic capture) are manual,
>> but it's grid-based, so things line up.
>>
>> Noel
>
> Not to mention it's open source so if you don't like the control you
> have you can always change it as desired.
>
> Todd
>
I settled on and used KiCAD for both the schematic and PCB layout for my
Mark-8 project and a couple of other smaller boards, after looking at
AutoTrax (DeX), DesignSpark and DipTrace. I actually installed and
tried AutoTrax and DesignSpark.
I had no problems at all with KiCAD, really. Open source, open ended.
Had no issues sending the boards off to be fabricated, etc.
JRJ
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