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Mail Archives: geda-user/2015/10/24/21:49:32

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Date: Sun, 25 Oct 2015 01:49:24 +0000
Message-ID: <CAM2RGhQGKaaQtvckLhzQ4RY5cj4e3DLX+Lt1NHDqSJysTK5mpg@mail.gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [geda-user] Star shorts
From: "Evan Foss (evanfoss AT gmail DOT com) [via geda-user AT delorie DOT com]" <geda-user AT delorie DOT com>
To: gEDA users mailing list <geda-user AT delorie DOT com>
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On Sat, Oct 24, 2015 at 6:56 PM, Nicklas Karlsson
(nicklas DOT karlsson17 AT gmail DOT com) [via geda-user AT delorie DOT com]
<geda-user AT delorie DOT com> wrote:
>> > On to PCB (or any other layout too; John Doty can close his ears for
>> > this part).  AFAICT, there is no established technique to implement
>> > such a star short in a way that will pass DRC.  There needs to be
>> > copper half-inside the DRC process, that definitely shows up on the
>> > Gerber output.  This copper can't exist during the netlist check
>> > (optimize rats).
>>
>>
>> > To my feeble brain (it's been a difficult week) it would make sense
>> > to use a special-purpose layer for this job.  The star short component
>> > would put copper on it.  it would show up as part of one layer
>> > for every step except the rats processor.  I guess this extra layer
>> > could be paired with any copper layer?  And you could have star
>> > grounds (and this layer) for any copper layer?  The footprint would
>> > have to be carefully designed (and maybe depend on the design rules?)
>> > so that there's no chance of any copper, other than the wires attaching
>> > to the star, touching the ghost copper that makes the short.
>> >
>>
>> Another option would be to somehow have pcb keep it's nose out of any
>> connectivity that happens intra-footprint, since that's none of its
>> business, and make overlapping pads.  I was going to propose this, and then
>> realized that pcb would actually probably consider it a short.  So I think
>>  the current behavior (assuming it does complain) is not intuitive.  This
>> could lead to nasty results for broken footprints of course, but broken
>> (e.g. pin-swapped) footprints are always nasty and there's nothing gEDA can
>> do to catch that sort of thing.
>
> I think pcb design rule check should care about copper regardless of how it have been created because that's what physics like ohms law care about.

+1
The thing is there will always been structures that are creating some
function but are just too far ahead of what we have trained PCB to
understand.

>
> Nicklas Karlsson



-- 
Home
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Work
http://forge.abcd.harvard.edu/gf/project/epl_engineering/wiki/

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