kicad

KiCAD Forums

Last updated: 30 Aug 2014 - 16:08

A few weeks ago Chris Gammell (of The Amp Hour and more recently Contextual Electronics) has released his set of KiCAD videos, and set up a forum for users to discus the software, all available on the new kicad.info site. I've been using KiCAD for about 6 years now (I looked up my first PCB order I designed with it and it was September 2008) and whilst I happily recommend it to anyone who wants to get into PCB design, I've completely forgotten how complex it is to learn to use. I think the video series is a great starting point and the forums are a good way to troubleshoot specific issues you have. There are a good number of people on there now but the more people, the better the range of discussion. There are a couple of existing mailing lists for KiCAD, the developers mailing list on Launchpad and a users mailing list which is a Yahoo group that always gave me a really terrible user experience. The new forum is much more intuitive and interactive.

Section:
Reviews
Tags:
kicad,
eda,
Open Source

Trimming Silk Screen on KiCad

Last updated: 18 May 2014 - 15:03

A few connectors and the heatsink in this design are over-hanging the board.

Offending Silk Screen: A few connectors and the heatsink in this design are over-hanging the board.

Sometimes when submitting boards for cheap panelised manufacture you need to keep all of the layers of the gerber file within the size of the PCB. In some boards I find there are bits of silk screen (e.g. connector outlines) which overlap the edge of the board. As far as I can see there's no way to limit the silk screen to the edges of the board by default, but I have a work around that might be useful.

Section:
Tutorials
Tags:
kicad,
PCB

OggCamp 13: Forking Hardware!

Last updated: 19 Oct 2013 - 09:31

This year at OggCamp I presented on using version control to manage hardware projects. It's something I think will be really important as the barrier to spinning a new hardware design gets lower and lower. Below are the slides from the talk I did.

Section:
Tutorials
Tags:
GIT,
kicad,
3D printing,
hardware,
work-flow

Announcing the OggBox Project

Last updated: 14 Aug 2012 - 22:03

The OggBox is a simple, hackable open hardware music player. It's a pocket sized device, about the size of a smart phone which can play or record open formats to or from an SD card. It will support Ogg Vorbis, FLAC and WAV files, but has only been tested on Ogg so far. The hardware was designed in KiCAD and all the files are available to download and use (CC-BY-SA).

Section:
Projects
Tags:
OggBox,
Open Hardware,
Open Source,
kicad

OSHW Logo for Kicad PCB Milling

Last updated: 01 Mar 2012 - 21:38

Screenshot of the OSHW logo footprint for KiCAD

I've been tinkering with some simple PCB layout jobs in KiCAD over the last couple of weeks. (Hopefully they'll be worth posting here if I can get them finished!) One of these boards is probably going to be cut out on a PCB mill, so it's not going to have a solder mask or silk screen. I wanted to still have the Open Source Hardware logo, there's a big selection available at http://www.oshwa.org/open-source-hardware-logo/ including downloadable modules for KiCAD but they're all silk screen logos, so I went about creating a copper only logo.


Section:
Projects
Tags:
kicad,
eda,
Open Hardware,
OSHW,
PCB milling

KiCAD Open Source Schematic to PCB Tools

Last updated: 07 Feb 2012 - 22:19

KiCAD logo

You may have noticed in the schematics I post for various projects that I use KiCAD for all my designs. It's a free and open source package with no limitations on part count, pin count or board size. The software is cross platform, supporting Linux, Mac and Windows, and on Linux you'll probably find it in your distribution's repositories. Unlike the other big open source electronics design software gEDA it is fairly intuitive and not that different from other commercial packages I've used (OrCAD or Altium Designer). Unlike cost free versions of proprietary software like Eagle there are no reasonable limits on the board size, part count or pin count that you can create with this software and while it lacks some advanced features such as more complex curved pad shapes etc. it is very stable now and is well up to commercial work.

Section:
Reviews
Tags:
Open Source,
kicad,
eda,
Eagle,
CAD

Z80 Mark 2: The Great Documentation Project

Last updated: 19 Dec 2010 - 12:33

I recently received an enquiry about how the I/O throttling on the PIC worked to ensure that the PSP was shifting valid data out to the Z80. I had a look back at my code and figured out how I'd done it. However I realised in that conversation that the schematics for the project were vastly out of date and it seemed that I hadn't been keeping as up to date as I thought I was with my local copies. I've spent several evenings in the last week and more or less re-drawn all the schematics from scratch, referencing the old snippets and the code and occasionally resorting to the continuity tester!

The schematics are in a number of fairly self contained PDFs here, I'll push the KiCAD source to git hub in the new year after I've finished my Christmas trips. Each unit of the system is mainly only connected by the Z80 busses (data, control and address) although the interrupt controller and the I/O decode have a lot of ancillary signals in them. Hopefully this is all fairly clear, it inclu

Section:
Z80 Project
Tags:
Z80 Mark 2,
retro-computing,
electronics,
schematics,
kicad,
eda

Contact

Email: nathan@nathandumont.com

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