Z
zilinxchip
Guest
Hi,
Upto now I've been building simple little projects on breadboards.
Now I'd like to try my hand at designing a pcb board with an MCU onboard
and all.
I have a couple of questions which have puzzled me.
1) Is the board designed first and then the software written for the MCU
or is it the other way around. I had one old school electical engineer
tell me the board is designed first whereas I thought the software and
circuitry is prototyped in pieces first and then comes the completed
schematic layout.
2) How do board level designers (who may not know much about programming
the MCU) know HOW to layout the board? Do they just look at application
notes from the manufacturer and lay things out and get it right on the
first shot!?
3) Is it possible that a board level designer can layout a board without
knowing anything about programming the chips onboard?
4) For surface mount chips (not in a DIP format where you can plop it into
a breadboard for trial purposes), how do you go about trying them out
before actually committing them to be produced on a PCB?
5) When you want to incorporate a chip into your design and hook it upto
other chips onboard, what is the first thing you go searching for? The
datasheet or...? How can you be sure it will work in harmony with what's
already onboard (i.e. all the pin connections are correct)
I got a few more questions but I'll stop here for now.
Thanks
Upto now I've been building simple little projects on breadboards.
Now I'd like to try my hand at designing a pcb board with an MCU onboard
and all.
I have a couple of questions which have puzzled me.
1) Is the board designed first and then the software written for the MCU
or is it the other way around. I had one old school electical engineer
tell me the board is designed first whereas I thought the software and
circuitry is prototyped in pieces first and then comes the completed
schematic layout.
2) How do board level designers (who may not know much about programming
the MCU) know HOW to layout the board? Do they just look at application
notes from the manufacturer and lay things out and get it right on the
first shot!?
3) Is it possible that a board level designer can layout a board without
knowing anything about programming the chips onboard?
4) For surface mount chips (not in a DIP format where you can plop it into
a breadboard for trial purposes), how do you go about trying them out
before actually committing them to be produced on a PCB?
5) When you want to incorporate a chip into your design and hook it upto
other chips onboard, what is the first thing you go searching for? The
datasheet or...? How can you be sure it will work in harmony with what's
already onboard (i.e. all the pin connections are correct)
I got a few more questions but I'll stop here for now.
Thanks