

- #AUTODESK CIRCUITS HOW TO#
- #AUTODESK CIRCUITS PROFESSIONAL#
- #AUTODESK CIRCUITS SERIES#
- #AUTODESK CIRCUITS FREE#
I guess I need to just sit sown sometime and soldier through this kind of thing.Today, Flanders-based start-up Circuits.io – an open hardware community providing free collaborative circuit design tools – has been acquired by American IT company Autodesk I think I looked at once but didn't have time to work through the learning curve, got a but frustrated and put it aside.

#AUTODESK CIRCUITS HOW TO#
I'm looking forward to seeing your steps on how to use this I'd also love to see more about the program you mentioned ExpressPCB.
#AUTODESK CIRCUITS PROFESSIONAL#
I have a lot of home made project boards with circuits I've built in pinball games and my B9 robot that I'd love to have made into a more professional looking boards.Īnyway, sorry for the long post. I like the idea that you can run simulations and even order a board to be made. With a tool like you have pointed to and knowledge of how to use it things like this would be much easier to figure out. One across the feed wires and one more in each of the feed wire but in different directions.
#AUTODESK CIRCUITS SERIES#
To make a long story short (too late) after several failed attempts all I had to do was add a series of blocking diodes to the added lamp. The added light was confusing the computer that was controlling the matrix I think. Anyway, just adding the spotlight and wiring it to the under playfield socket didn't do the trick and it caused a lot of other lights in the matrix to turn on and off at the wrong times. I wanted a spotlight to come on and shine on something at the same time that an under playfield lamp comes on that shows a shot to make. Controlled lamps on most pinball machines are wired in a matrix design. Just over the past few days I had been struggling with adding an extra lamp and socket that is piggybacked off and existing lamp in a controlled lamp circuit in a pinball machine. It seems like I'm always building little circuits to add the functions to something. Although I'm sure I could figure out how to use it I really don't have much time to learn it. I don't shy away from much but for some reason this kind of stuff seems a little overwhelming. If you are able to post the steps to start and use this program the process would be much easier for me. This really excites me because I've been wanting to find and learn a design program like this.

I'm not interested in the timing issue that was bought up above but I was wondering what this was all about myself and how to use it when I saw the post pop up.

I hope you understand where I'm coming, Thanks for putting this up. If tutorials are missing information this will only confuse people more. There are tutorials which you and other members of the community can link to which answers those questions and saves re-writing everything over and over. There is no tutorial or amount of tutorials which will stop new (or even existing) members of the community asking questions. I have around 30 unfinished tutorials on my PC, some are now redundant but others need a bit more work done to them, they wont be posted until they make total sense and cover the topic from start to finish with a complete and working solution/method/answer. Don't be in such a rush to get a tutorial or post up, make it complete. Look at the community tutorials from Anthony, myself, robot-doc, they all have full, complete, from start to finish information and not this "to be added later". Look at any of the tutorials in the learn section DJ wrote, complete information from start to finish. My point is, and hopefully none of this comes across the wrong way (as you know we all appreciate what you do) but a tutorial should be everything from start to finish, preferably in the first post, all together, all written clearly, working links where necessaryetc.
