Sujet : Re: Instead scopes
De : alien (at) *nospam* comet.invalid (Jan Panteltje)
Groupes : sci.electronics.designDate : 30. Aug 2024, 07:47:54
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <varpuq$1sgha$1@solani.org>
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On a sunny day (Thu, 29 Aug 2024 11:47:42 -0700) it happened john larkin
<
jl@650pot.com> wrote in <
pcg1djt6otqheh6vgi9len892jd21g1sn0@4ax.com>:
On Thu, 29 Aug 2024 16:21:21 GMT, Jan Panteltje <alien@comet.invalid>
wrote:
>
On a sunny day (Fri, 30 Aug 2024 00:43:39 +1000) it happened Bill Sloman
<bill.sloman@ieee.org> wrote in <vaq1f2$jdj$1@dont-email.me>:
>
It's lot easier and quicker to bread-board a circuit in LTSpice than it
is to wire up a test circuit, but what that means is that you need to
make fewer real circuits and they are a lot more likely to work when tested.
>
That, on it's own, is enough to explain why labs look different today
than they did in the dark ages.
>
All it explains is boeings falling apart and astronuts ending up stuck at the ISS
and no moonlanding from the US, not even a probe.
>
The ISS and moon landings are super-expensive theatre. Neither
accomplishes anything.
>
Boeing and Microsoft have the same problem, bean counter money-mongers
have taken over from engineers.
>
Slimulations are _not_ realty and never will be.
>
Spice can be very handy. As Mike says, LT Spice's real function is to
train your instincts.
I dunno, much I learned from working with tubes and transistors was by building small circuits and measuring what happened.
Sure spice is great for math intensive stuff such as filters.. but you still need to know the basics.
These days with chips doing much of the work and limited knowledge what is actually _in_ those chips
it is hard to tell if a real circuit will behave like spice tells you
You will still need real testing.
Maybe boeing just spiced their thrusters :-)