How To Design A PCB, A Beginners Guide Tutorial - Part 3
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- Опубликовано: 24 мар 2023
- In Part 3 of this beginners guide we look at some more advanced topics. Instead of using the autorouter to convert our schematic into a PCB layout we will use manual routing. To find out why and how to do this, you just gotta click PLAY
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Richard
Thanks very much for this video of which i found very interesting to watch. 😁
Thank you for a great video. This is how more advanced PCBs should be designed by using these methods and draw traces with manual routing. My compliments 🙂
This is a skill I really want to learn
Especially for little things like adapters that can be very expensive to track down if no longer in production
In particular socket adapters for retro pc's
Great Vid Give us more Detlev......cheers.
Heya, love to see this callab well done
Thanks very much for this video proberly the best i have seen for EDA
i have had a few simple boards made with no problem but two more complex ones did not work now i know why.
Thanks for another great Vid Richard. Question if I may. Are you not concerned with the VCC going to the Darlington being right at the edge of the board? I only ask because I had an amp out of a cheap 15" PA speaker (Pyle) and the vcc supplying the power transistor had a similar arrangement. once the edge of the board contacted the heat sink, boom goes the dynamite...Never did get that amp working again. Might be a good project for me to try and redesign their crappy amp. 1500W my but.
Is it cheaper to have a single sided PCB from PCBWay? As an "oldie" we always produced single sided if we could - the single sided board was cheaper, we used less etchant and (nowadays) it would be regarded as much more environmentally friendly. Routing took a little more effort but if you needed a wire link (nowadays I'd guess that would be called a zero-ohm link) it wasn't regarded as a problem as it was just soldered as another component. For applications of less than a few amps I never recall having heat dissipation issues ... but are modern copper layers thinner than they used to be so higher resistance for a given track width?
Hi Andy - there is actually no difference if you order single or double sided - I guess the base material always comes in double sided, and if you order single sided PCBs, they simply etch one side off.
For track widths (and thermal problems): I had the space, so I went for wider tracks. This Application will probably never run long enough to develop any serious temperatures, so I could get away with thinner tracks. Bus as stated: I had the space ;)
Is there any reason that you didn't panelized this so that you would get more pieces? Thanks for the video
@Mr Guru I don't know much about what you say but I always panelized my boards so I can cut line and change items to get to my final design.
We're dettof amend channel
Any Linux alternative
I think it is a cloud application accessed through your browser. I was looking at the site this morning and it is proud to be cross platform.
Hi 543210 - EasyEDA can run in your browser. In the Video, we were using Firefox, but anything current should do the trick.
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