I started testing out and using qspice. It was made by the same guy who made LTspice. It’s a lot easier to get into since it’s more modern. Downside is it’s newer so there could be bugs, but if you post on the forum the developers will get back to you super fast. They also release almost daily updates and they might even fix your bug report in a day or so. Worth checking out!
Do any of these handle limits or are they all theoretical response only? (ex. plot the gain of an opamp from 1 to 1 million.) Will the plot give noise and offset? Or will it simply give the theoretical response of the opamp? A real opamp might saturate from offset long before the million gain, or have full scale noise. I get the idea these simulators are only good for basic function but not for real world situations.
I've seen Professor Fiore, who does a lot of electronics on youtube, also using TINA-TI and given what he does with it, it does look quite tempting as a spice GUI as well. I don't like how in LTSpice, I have noticed over the years they keep removing some of the older components... which I still like...
looks like you have some interesting videos, sir...being one of those 'old guys', i do, sometimes, make critical comments, but always trying to be constructive. i need to go back and look at previous ones... on a small screen, this one was quite hard to follow, and you move rather quickly through things that 'beginners' need to absorb...possibly, in editing, you could zoom in on menus or options? cheers!
I love LTSpice🖤
Its super powerful, but when you don't use it often it is always hard to get into again.
I started testing out and using qspice. It was made by the same guy who made LTspice. It’s a lot easier to get into since it’s more modern. Downside is it’s newer so there could be bugs, but if you post on the forum the developers will get back to you super fast. They also release almost daily updates and they might even fix your bug report in a day or so. Worth checking out!
It takes some warming up to remember where everything is :)
this is gold. thank you
Good explanation for beginers to see force of Spice ,Thanks for your affort
Bro finally I can have a silly scope on my browser 🙏
You don't even have to download it!
Awesome video ❤
awesome thank you! maybe one day soon i can try to dev my own simulator - as a learning excursion
Do any of these handle limits or are they all theoretical response only? (ex. plot the gain of an opamp from 1 to 1 million.) Will the plot give noise and offset? Or will it simply give the theoretical response of the opamp? A real opamp might saturate from offset long before the million gain, or have full scale noise. I get the idea these simulators are only good for basic function but not for real world situations.
you can add noise to any node and you can work with ideal/real world opamps or any components in ltspice
I've seen Professor Fiore, who does a lot of electronics on youtube, also using TINA-TI and given what he does with it, it does look quite tempting as a spice GUI as well. I don't like how in LTSpice, I have noticed over the years they keep removing some of the older components... which I still like...
TINA-TI is another good spice option
looks like you have some interesting videos, sir...being one of those 'old guys', i do, sometimes, make critical comments, but always trying to be constructive. i need to go back and look at previous ones... on a small screen, this one was quite hard to follow, and you move rather quickly through things that 'beginners' need to absorb...possibly, in editing, you could zoom in on menus or options?
cheers!
I'll remember to zoom in more for future videos
A black background is a no-no for waveform graphing TH-cam videos. The traces are invisible on a phone small screen.
There's also Micro-Cap 12.
is there any tool that turn circuit to bakelite pcb ?
(m not sure if m correct with `bakelite` name, but I meant those pcb with long vertical wire)
and, that new one, qspice...
is there a discord server?