furball1985
Experienced Member
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2022
- Messages
- 163
just random but i was looking around archives and i found this mag
page 2 has a advertisment for the JOLT
page 2 has a advertisment for the JOLT
Unfortunately the schematic does not, as of this moment, exist anywhere. I did write Ray Holt asking about it but no response as of yet. So I'm just treating this as a 'connect and pray' situation for now.Did you enter the schematic first?
If you did, the PCB tool can identify missing tracks.
Dave
The best way is to create / recreate the schematic first, then create a PCB layout. If done that way, everyone gains more knowledge. If one just re-creates a PCB without the schematic, one has just created a new piece of artwork, which may or may not work.Unfortunately the schematic does not, as of this moment, exist anywhere. I did write Ray Holt asking about it but no response as of yet. So I'm just treating this as a 'connect and pray' situation for now.
I think the best I can hope for is to try and reverse engineer what I have into a schematic and then turn that over to people who know more than I do to check and correct. Not having a schematic to start with makes the task really difficult for me.The best way is to create / recreate the schematic first, then create a PCB layout. If done that way, everyone gains more knowledge. If one just re-creates a PCB without the schematic, one has just created a new piece of artwork, which may or may not work.
Correct. I noticed the same. The large chip is a 74154 4 to 16 decoder. I think this is an early version of the address decoder that was replaced by the subsequent chips on the board you are cloning.
Yes - that was what I was trying to say here: reverse engineer the pcb into a schematic, then share it to get more eyes on it.I think the best I can hope for is to try and reverse engineer what I have into a schematic and then turn that over to people who know more than I do to check and correct. Not having a schematic to start with makes the task really difficult for me.
The way I do it, I use photographs of the PCB (no surprise there), which I annotate on the solder side with drawings of the components. Based on that I draw a first version of the schematic, this is more like a ratsnest than anything else, no division of circuits into logical blocks etc. When I am reasonable sure that it is correct, I start to organize the schematic into logical subcircuits and so on.I have to wrap my head around how to organize and reverse engineer a schematic. Just the 'how to place and follow things in a logical way' so I don't get lost or confused. I've traced out parts of a machine or board into a schematic of sorts but the bigger it gets the more confused I get