Join the challenge - design a pcb

Bravo!

Couple things to consider and remember. This applies to design in general.

- Don't go crazy with trace width. Eagle's default width of 16mil is ok. 10mil for toner transfer may be problematic sometimes. Especialy with aggresive etchant sollution. 10mil is ok for a fab house.

- Keep an eye on separation between traces. Don't go below 16-20mil.

- Make sure that the solder pads of the components you are using are not too small. It's possible to enlarge them by modifying component package (library). They're often designed for a fab house fabrication, automated drilling. It's easier to damage a small solder pad while drilling, soldering, desoldering.

- Check the board and schematic for errors. For the schematic - look for the unconnected pins, overlaping connections.
For the board - run design rules check before making the board. Check the resutls for any clerance warnings, overlaping traces.

- Lay out the critical elements first - supply and in/out pads, potentiometers, switches,

- Draw outline of the enclosure or find a library that contains drawings of the enclosures/switches/jacks. There's one available for Eagle (on a Madban Forum).

- Do not hesitate to use jumpers instead running 10 inch long trace just to go around the IC or any other components.

- Keep separation between in/out pads and traces, especially on high gain circuits.

- Don't put tall components under a jack space.

- You can always install the LED off the board and take positive supply directly from the DC jack.

- Compare components you're goig to use with a footprints on the pcb. For transistors - check the pinout.
Thank you so much i think ive burned my brain out for the day haha So i realized what you mean about the Libraries their packages are not the same as the components we use so i downloaded a library that would contain our components still not all are there but for now it works fine. Man theres alot of consideration to take in when laying it out. I think i made good progress tomorrow im going to start the layout from scratch but this time following your tips. Hopefully this comes out better than the rats nest i had :ROFLMAO:


EDIT: Using jumper wire for this single sided board might be 100 percent necessary. Its really hard not overlapping your traces!
 
Oof I think voting should be the way to go. But you can’t vote yourself! Then again I really like the jury thing leaves it up to the contest holders!
 
That looks incredibly good! Way better than the rats nest I had then again the circuit I chose might be to big for it to be single sided!
I’m 100% sure it can be sooo much better. But didn’t even put in the foot switch yet. I cheated and put all the grounds on the back 😂
 
I suspect that vertically mounted resistors are not required here :). The board is huge, like a landing field ;)
Haha. It’s my artistic interpretation.

Just messing around and seeing how the program works. Looks pretty powerful for free software!
 
I’m 100% sure it can be sooo much better. But didn’t even put in the foot switch yet. I cheated and put all the grounds on the back 😂
Idk if This is your first time doing this but isn’t it fun?! I’m gonna have to utilize some jumpers on the back if I’m to make the circuit I have going on work!
 
FTR:
I'm dead set against the more common circuits: Rats, YATs, JAMs, FFaces...
Simple doesn't mean it has to be the usual same-ol-same-ol boring done-to-death circuits.



I'm hoping for a circuit that is:

Simple — a given, as many of us are newbs to circuit layout
Fun — subjective, yes.
and/or
Useful — equally subjective.
 
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