Poll

Have you purchased a PCB tool only for hobby/non-commercial use?

Yes
29 (25.7%)
No
84 (74.3%)

Total Members Voted: 110

Author Topic: Have you purchased a PCB tool only for hobby/non-commercial use  (Read 16162 times)

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Offline Janaha

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Re: Have you purchased a PCB tool only for hobby/non-commercial use
« Reply #25 on: October 07, 2013, 08:08:15 pm »
Hy.

No, i haven't purchaed a PCB tool for my hobby.

All i have seen till now are realy crippled versions of the professional versions at prices my port de monai dosen't like. Like those licenses where you only could use a couple off pins (like only 200 to 500pins or so), or you are limited by the usable PCB space (smaler than my faforite 160*100cm euro format). Only one or two sided, missing autorouter etc etc.

So i searched the internet and found those lovely tool named KiCad. It dosen't cost a cent and by now i made all my PCB designes with it. At the begining i used it only to make single sided pcb's that i also self etched. My last PCB's are mostly double sided, exported to Gerber and made for me on the other "end" of the world for a realy small price. :-)

Till now my greates hobby designed Board is a 20*20cm double sided PCB with 951 pads. It's a simple Computer made with a Atmega644p Microcontroller as it's main processor. Atachable to a TV by a SCART Connector and programmable in a simple and easy to use basic dialect. The Design is based on the work from Jörg Wolfram who invented the AVR-Chipbasic2 one- chip solution. The original can be found here http://www.jcwolfram.de/projekte/avr/chipbasic2/main.php ( only german text, sorry :-( ) I uploaded a pic of my version, so you can see the havy modded version of it.

Greetings Janaha
 

Offline railman

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Re: Have you purchased a PCB tool only for hobby/non-commercial use
« Reply #26 on: October 07, 2013, 09:46:46 pm »
Yes, I to bought a Eagle Hobbyist license. I found it to be  fair and affordable. I started out using Eagle, and I've tried Diptrace and Kicad but keep going back to Eagle.
 

Offline zorder

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Re: Have you purchased a PCB tool only for hobby/non-commercial use
« Reply #27 on: October 08, 2013, 09:11:06 pm »
I used to work with the free version of Eagle, but the pcb size limit is very restrictive. I moved to Kicad and I'm very happy with it, although there are a bunch of things that need to be improved.  :-+
 

Offline tized

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Re: Have you purchased a PCB tool only for hobby/non-commercial use
« Reply #28 on: October 10, 2013, 11:07:03 am »
Tried Eagle about three years ago and was very disappointed with the workflow. Discovered KiCad and have been using it ever since.
 

Offline delmadord

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Re: Have you purchased a PCB tool only for hobby/non-commercial use
« Reply #29 on: October 10, 2013, 05:28:15 pm »
I was using Eagle, but had some problems wit it, don't remember the details, unfortunately. Then I tried KiCAD in the Open Source spirit, but I hated the multi-step process of annotation (I believe it is the name for that). Now I am using free version of Diptrace. But I am still not sure if will I buy some tool, when the DIptrace pin limit kicks in. So far it is good.
 

Offline LaurenceW

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Re: Have you purchased a PCB tool only for hobby/non-commercial use
« Reply #30 on: October 11, 2013, 10:19:42 pm »
Am I the only person here to have bought EasyPC from Number One systems in the UK? http://www.numberone.com/

I bought the 1000 pin version a while back, and upgrade to the latest release (one comes out every year!) about every 2-3 years for around USD $100 a time.  I use it for hobby use, selling a few of the end products that result.

I think Farnell/Element14 may be offering some sort of cut-down free version of EasyPC? Not sure of the details.

I really like EasyPC (up to around V17, now). It does everything (and more) that I want in a PCB CAD package. I've never really tried anything else, so cannot compare. Like most people at the hobby level, having made the time and/or money investment in one package, I tend to stick with it!

And what's wrong with WordStar, anyway? :-// (yes, I really am that old)
If you don't measure, you don't get.
 

Offline jancumpsTopic starter

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Re: Have you purchased a PCB tool only for hobby/non-commercial use
« Reply #31 on: October 11, 2013, 10:27:55 pm »
We've been at approximately 25% since vote #4.
 

Offline Greyersting

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Re: Have you purchased a PCB tool only for hobby/non-commercial use
« Reply #32 on: October 11, 2013, 10:39:40 pm »
All I had to do was buy the boards, I had everything else I needed at home.
Contact-
Greyersting2@gmail.com
 

Offline Maxlor

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Re: Have you purchased a PCB tool only for hobby/non-commercial use
« Reply #33 on: October 11, 2013, 11:04:01 pm »
I've been using Eagle so far. It's a reasonably unified tool and works well on Linux, so there you go. So far my skills have been well below what I can do with the free version. Once I'll surpass that, I'll probably get the hobbyist version without much hesitation. I'd probably have bought that already if their licenses carried over to the next major version, but 5.x licenses don't work for 6.x, bummer.

At work, we use both Altium and Eagle, actually. Altium is used for the high-end stuff by the guys who know how to do high-end stuff, and Eagle is used by us software guys who just need some microcontrollers to glue things together. I do see that Altium is orders of magnitude better than Eagle. But let me tell you this: one app is not enough to make me use Windows instead of some Unix-like OS. I hear the Altium guys are cooking up a hobbyist version, let's hope they at least get i working under wine, if not under *nix proper. Otherwise I'll just stick with Eagle. Might cause me a bit more work with the hardware parts, but having *nix will make it up for the software aspects.
 

Offline Garywoo

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Re: Have you purchased a PCB tool only for hobby/non-commercial use
« Reply #34 on: October 16, 2013, 03:49:23 am »
Not personally but i have huge respect for the folks that do, and if i did it as more than a hobby i would too.
 

Offline bdivi

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Re: Have you purchased a PCB tool only for hobby/non-commercial use
« Reply #35 on: October 16, 2013, 12:49:06 pm »
Eagle free - works for small projects.
Used to use Orcad/PSpice in the past but this was too much for DIY.
 

Offline Chris56000

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Re: Have you purchased a PCB tool only for hobby/non-commercial use
« Reply #36 on: April 10, 2023, 12:24:33 pm »
Hi !

Quote

Am I the only person here to have bought EasyPC from Number One systems in the UK? http://www.numberone.com/

I bought the 1000 pin version a while back, and upgrade to the latest release (one comes out every year!) about every 2-3 years for around USD $100 a time.  I use it for hobby use, selling a few of the end products that result.

I think Farnell/Element14 may be offering some sort of cut-down free version of EasyPC? Not sure of the details.

I really like EasyPC (up to around V17, now). It does everything (and more) that I want in a PCB CAD package. I've never really tried anything else, so cannot compare. Like most people at the hobby level, having made the time and/or money investment in one package, I tend to stick with it!


Hear, Hear!

My copy is part–bought/part donated – I was given the old V15 Easy–PC Licence by the design engineer that formerly used it when one of my previous employers closed the Electronics Department there, and on explaining to Number One how I came in possession of it they agreed to allow me to keep the licence and buy future versions at the upgrade price!

I have made two replacement boards for Vintage Colour TVs with it as well as six designs for my friend at home, and more designs for me are in the pipeline!

There is a free version of "Easy–PC", by RS called Design Spark, now on Version 10, part crippled compared with "Easy–PC", (no usable auto–router or 'Reverse Engineering" tool for example), but I think it is still unrestricted for board size, pin and layer count!

I also bought sPlan 8.0 for my circuit–diagram work and nothing beats it for speed and versatility – if I want a diagram like a Philips G11 with pretty coloured circuit blocks and pastel tints I can make one easily !

I also bought Sprint Layout 6.0 for magazine PCBs where only artwork is available as the artwork can be traced over, and any mistakes made in the magazine artwork can be corrected at the layout stage!

I also bought "Circuit Wizard Professional" by New Wave Concepts but it seems they've now added some enormously expensive add–on to it you have to buy as they've crippled what was previously a full version!

Chris Williams
« Last Edit: April 10, 2023, 12:39:37 pm by Chris56000 »
It's an enigma that's what it is!! This thing's not fixed because it doesn't want to be fixed!!
 

Offline alm

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Re: Have you purchased a PCB tool only for hobby/non-commercial use
« Reply #37 on: April 10, 2023, 06:27:09 pm »
It's been 10 years after the last post. I think many people will have switched to something else in the past decade...

Offline Gary350z

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Re: Have you purchased a PCB tool only for hobby/non-commercial use
« Reply #38 on: April 10, 2023, 06:43:39 pm »
So far I'm still happy with the free non profit license of Diptrace 2 layers 500 pins, thanks to Diptrace.  :-+

Before Diptrace, tried to use & learned hard Eagle for few weeks and simply gave up, maybe its just me, cause I think the interface & gui is way too unintuitive.   :-//

This exactly, both statements.
 

Offline scopeman

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Re: Have you purchased a PCB tool only for hobby/non-commercial use
« Reply #39 on: January 13, 2024, 02:32:21 am »
Well as some may know yours truly has used just about every PCB CAD program on the planet at one time or another starting with the DOS Wintek smARTWORK.

However the ones that I used the most early on was Tango PCB Series II DOS that I paid for and was one of the beta testers for. I used that for probably 2 decades until I could not get it to work anymore in high resolution display mode (or work at all) on modern operating systems.

I never really ever used the router package even though I had it.

So I went looking and found Abacom's SprintLayout V5.0 and later upgraded to V6.0.

I probably have done several hundred, maybe a thousand boards of various complexity with it. It was the easiest to learn most bug free PCB software I have ever used.

I have used it for professional and hobby type use buying a separate copy for work use. It's not hard to justify 49.9 euro (19% less than that if you are not in the EU) for a copy. I use OrCAD 9.2 for schematics as I bought an upgrade years ago from the DOS OrCAD back in the early 90's. I also bought a version of sPlan from Abacom and additionally their FrontDesigner3.0.

As a side note we did buy two seats of Altium but I turned my intern loose on that program as the learning curve was way too steep for what I needed to do in the time
I had to do it.

They aren't fancy but very usable software that is a great bang for the buck and has never disappointed me. Highly recommended.

Sam
W3OHM
W3OHM
 


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