DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   Electronics Repair (https://www.diybanter.com/electronics-repair/)
-   -   PCB Designing software (https://www.diybanter.com/electronics-repair/302256-pcb-designing-software.html)

[email protected] April 28th 10 10:06 PM

PCB Designing software
 
Please can anyone show me an easy- to- use PCB software that can
automaticaly prepare a circuit board after drawing the schematic
diagram? Or one that you just mount the components to get PCB.

Archon April 29th 10 12:28 AM

PCB Designing software
 
wrote:
Please can anyone show me an easy- to- use PCB software that can
automaticaly prepare a circuit board after drawing the schematic
diagram? Or one that you just mount the components to get PCB.

Hi, I recently used the services of
http://www.expresspcb.com/ the
service was excellent, probably not as sophisticated as some but the
miniPCB deal (Three 2.5"x3.8" boards for $50) is excellent, quality was
good, fast shipping with DC etc.
JC

Pete Bertini April 29th 10 12:31 AM

PCB Designing software
 

wrote in message
...
Please can anyone show me an easy- to- use PCB software that can
automaticaly prepare a circuit board after drawing the schematic
diagram? Or one that you just mount the components to get PCB.


You should be able to find the shareware versions of IVEX Windraft
and WinBoard on the web for download. The product is no longer
supported, and has a bit of a learning curve. I think the free version
has a 100 pin limit. Product had a few bugs and went through several
revisions, but it should do what you want.



Rich Webb April 29th 10 12:48 AM

PCB Designing software
 
On Wed, 28 Apr 2010 14:06:14 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote:

Please can anyone show me an easy- to- use PCB software that can
automaticaly prepare a circuit board after drawing the schematic
diagram? Or one that you just mount the components to get PCB.


There probably is nothing that can do a reasonable job of
"automatically" creating a board layout, given just the schematic (but I
could be wrong). However, there are packages that have schematic capture
and board layout components that work together to assist *you* to create
the layout.

KiCad http://kicad.sourceforge.net/wiki/index.php/Main_Page and gEDA
http://www.gpleda.org/ are each free, open source suites with schematic
capture and board layout.

KiCad has a reasonably active and supportive user community and is
available in versions for both Linux and MS Windows. The principal
author's homepage is over at http://iut-tice.ujf-grenoble.fr/kicad/

I'm less familiar with gEDA. As far as I know, there is not an official
MS Windows distribution available. DJ Delorie may drop by with more
info, though...

--
Rich Webb Norfolk, VA

Arfa Daily April 29th 10 02:29 AM

PCB Designing software
 

wrote in message
...
Please can anyone show me an easy- to- use PCB software that can
automaticaly prepare a circuit board after drawing the schematic
diagram? Or one that you just mount the components to get PCB.


ExpressSCH and ExpressPCB are two freebies that I have. They are reasonably
simple and easy to use. The PCB designer is not an autorouter, but if you
attach the netlist of a schematic produced by the drawing package, the PCB
package will guide you through making the correct connections between your
manually placed components, to satisfy the schematic.

Arfa



Dave Plowman (News) April 29th 10 09:27 AM

PCB Designing software
 
In article
,
wrote:
Please can anyone show me an easy- to- use PCB software that can
automaticaly prepare a circuit board after drawing the schematic
diagram? Or one that you just mount the components to get PCB.


That's missing out the best part of designing your own. ;-)

--
*Everyone has a photographic memory. Some don't have film *

Dave Plowman
London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.

JeffM April 30th 10 03:07 AM

PCB Designing software
 

an easy- to- use PCB software

Rich Webb wrote:
KiCad [...] and gEDA [...] are each free, open source suites
with schematic capture and board layout.

TinyCAD and FreePCB are also FOSS and work quasi-well together.
(Windoze-only, but both will run fine under WINE.)

[...]gEDA. As far as I know,
there is not an official MS Windows distribution available.

Previously, they had produced Windoze-compatible binaries
but they stopped when the mailing list got cluttered with inane
questions
from people who could barely use Windoze--much less use an ECAD.

Dan McMahill maintains the build script for getting gEDA going under
Windoze.
If you can get thru that successfully,
it demonstrates that you might be qualified to use the package.
http://google.com/search?q=site:seul...+OR +McMahill

Some boot-to-a-desktop Linux disks contain both gEDA and KiCAD.
Ubuntu Electronics Remix and Fedora Electronic Lab Spin
are probably the most up to date.
You can run those without installing anything.
Ubuntu and Fedora can write to FAT32 and NTFS partitions.

....and this question doesn't qualify as "repair".
Questions about ECADs belong in sci.electronics.cad
just as beginners' questions belong in sci.electronics.basics.


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:03 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter