On Fri, Jun 5, 2009 at 5:28 PM, Rob Butts <[1]r.but...@gmail.com>
wrote:
How do you print the postscript file? I doubt I can do it on
windows. I guess I'm going to have to bite the bullet and get my
printer working in fedora (uhgg).
On Fedora I use kghostview to v
Hi!
> How do you print the postscript file? I doubt I can do it on
> windows.
Yes you can:
http://pages.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost/gsview/get49.htm
--
metan
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How do you print the postscript file? I doubt I can do it on
windows. I guess I'm going to have to bite the bullet and get my
printer working in fedora (uhgg).
On Fri, Jun 5, 2009 at 4:33 PM, John Luciani <[1]jluci...@gmail.com>
wrote:
On Fri, Jun 5, 2009 at 4:27 PM, Rob Bu
On Fri, Jun 5, 2009 at 4:27 PM, Rob Butts <[1]r.but...@gmail.com>
wrote:
I'm exporting a postscript file and then converting that to a pdf
with
the ps2pdf command. I then come up in windows and print the file
to
my Samsung laser printer. I have to do this be
Draw a board with an exactly 6x6 inch rectangle on it (either a solid
rectangle, or fat traces on a 6x6 centers. Print that and measure the
actual sizes (edge to edge for rectangle, left side to left side for
fat traces, etc) and see if your print process is scaling it at all.
If the print is OK
I'm exporting a postscript file and then converting that to a pdf with
the ps2pdf command. I then come up in windows and print the file to
my Samsung laser printer. I have to do this because I have not been
able to get my printers to print in fedora.
On Fri, Jun 5, 2009 at 1:24
On Jun 4, 2009, at 7:20 PM, John Coppens wrote:
> On Thu, 4 Jun 2009 17:15:34 -0400
> Rob Butts wrote:
>
>> I print out the etch pattern to make a home-made card the pins don't
>> line up.
>
> How are you printing? Using postscript? Or via another program - maybe
> GIMP or so? Does that program
On Thu, 4 Jun 2009 17:15:34 -0400
Rob Butts wrote:
> I print out the etch pattern to make a home-made card the pins don't
> line up.
How are you printing? Using postscript? Or via another program - maybe
GIMP or so? Does that program have a fit-to-page function, which might
change the scale? Are
> I verified the footprint with the mark function. The ic spec
> coincides with what I'm seeing in PCB. Yes, I did etch this myself.
You'll have to print a calibration page and calibrate your printer,
then, or etch a known-size pattern and calibrate the whole process.
In my case, I need to twea
I verified the footprint with the mark function. The ic spec
coincides with what I'm seeing in PCB. Yes, I did etch this myself.
On Thu, Jun 4, 2009 at 6:09 PM, DJ Delorie <[1...@delorie.com> wrote:
As a general rule, always check the part against a printout if
you're
u
As a general rule, always check the part against a printout if you're
unsure of the footprint. However, the "right footprint" issue is
different than the "looks right" issue. Use the Mark (ctrl-m) to
measure the distance between various pins and compare to the chip's
specs to see what's up.
Did
Well, after changing the grid setting to 0.1 the pitch is consistent..
My problem my be with the chip sample I have. When we put the ic on
the finished board the pins don't line up. For the most part they do
but as you go along from one end of the chip to the other the pins
don't
Screen shot?
I know that pixel artifacts can cause individual pins to look funny,
but that's just visual - not something inherent to the board.
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I'm using an h-bridge with a SO28 footprint. The SO28 footprint in
PCB has a .050 mil pitch which matches the spec for the chip. When I
place the footprint in PCB on a 1" x 1" inch card the pitch is
correct. My problem is that the actual card size is 6" x 4". At this
size the pi
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