steviejr92
Authorized Vendor
Being a NJ native I wouldn't be surprised if it was illegal....Oh and make sure not to buy a car on Sunday.....Can you charge your own EV in New Jersey?
Being a NJ native I wouldn't be surprised if it was illegal....Oh and make sure not to buy a car on Sunday.....Can you charge your own EV in New Jersey?
I usually just layout the schem then Ill let the program annotate the schematic. It'll start from the left side and sort of logically number them for you. You might have to go in to clean it up if you feel so but i found this is enough for me to understand it.Is there an accepted convention for numbering components in a circuit? Like does R1 start at the signal input? Do they go through the signal path and then to the power supply? How are they chosen?
I'm not using softwareI usually just layout the schem then Ill let the program annotate the schematic. It'll start from the left side and sort of logically number them for you. You might have to go in to clean it up if you feel so but i found this is enough for me to understand it.
I would still start form the left side of the schem this way its easy to follow....I'm not using software
I can do whatever I want but I'm asking if there's a norm around itI would still start form the left side of the schem this way its easy to follow....
I guess using R1 as an Input resistor makes sense?.....Now im thinking about it....
Maybe its up to the person who makes the schematic?
Is there an accepted convention for numbering components in a circuit? Like does R1 start at the signal input? Do they go through the signal path and then to the power supply? How are they chosen?
Before I got into working on MRIs, I worked in x-ray. Before refurbished/salvaged/second had parts were a thing(early-mid 90s(, GE would send out schematics for everything with new systems. The X-ray system schems were several 6 inch 3 ring binders of fold outs.One of my friends took an electronics class in college and part of one of their labs was repairing a broken wideband radio. He said they were given a schematic to help check over the circuit and it unfolded into 7 or 8 big pages.
Yes, no, and bothIs Guns n' Roses cheesey, badass, or both?
YesIs Guns n' Roses cheesey, badass, or both?
The norm is to make it easy to read. If the numbers flow from left to right, it makes it that much easier to find a specific ref des on hard copy.I can do whatever I want but I'm asking if there's a norm around it
Thanks for the sensible answerThe norm is to make it easy to read. If the numbers flow from left to right, it makes it that much easier to find a specific ref des on hard copy.
I believe overtigtning a switch where the internal nut threaded a touch closer to the switch body caused enough flex to be the root cause of a board failure I had a few months back.If you intend to tighten the nut on the outside of the front panel, then you also need a nut on the inside because otherwise you can overstress the joint between the threaded bushing and switch body when you tighten the outside nut. On the other hand, if you don't need the switch to support the board (in most cases, you won't), then you can omit all of the nuts & washers from the switches. There are low-profile switches, but it takes some searching to find them.
I usually do what Robert described above. Bending the legs right at the phenolic plate as shown above is a good way to crack the pot.