Guest
There seems so many symbols for the same thing
(except that Vss is GND I think) but when do we
use which ?
Tia
(except that Vss is GND I think) but when do we
use which ?
Tia
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There seems so many symbols for the same thing
(except that Vss is GND I think) but when do we
use which ?
Tia
In article <3f390220_5@corp.newsgroups.com>, howard_hs@yahoo.com
says...
As a young person, the history behind those names seems incredibly
baffling
(or stupid, not sure which). People have wondered about it before; you
might search Google Groops to try to make sense of it yourself.
Regardless though, Vcc refers to a common positive supply of bipolar ICs
(no
doubt related to a collector). Vdd refers to the common positive supply
of
CMOS circuits (no doubt related to a drain). Vss refers to a common
ground
(no doubt related to a source and therefore CMOS as well). Vee is used
to
refer to a negative supply (no doubt related to an emitter). Since CMOS
is
the most common technology today, if you use Vdd and Vss to describe
your
supplies you will most likely have your symbology right (although anyone
would understand you if you got it wrong, so long as you used the right
equivalent). To be the least ambiguous (and to work towards the
elimination
of symbols which don't seem to make any sense), it might be best to
refer to
signals as +5V or +3.3V and GND.
I think this is the best way, particularly since several voltages may
exist on one schematic. I turn it around so all the tools understand
the nomenclature though. I.e. V5 (+5), V33 (+3.3), V5N (-5V), etc. I
have had to get inventive when I had both +15V and +1.5V on the same
board though. ;-)
Take a tip from the Europeans (resistors, caps, etc) and use 3V3 & 1V5 ;-))
Some capture tools don't like leading numbers. I don't think"Keith R. Williams" <krw@attglobal.net> wrote in message
news:MPG.19a2d0cfb6c35c16989a28@enews.newsguy.com...
In article <3f390220_5@corp.newsgroups.com>, howard_hs@yahoo.com
says...
As a young person, the history behind those names seems incredibly
baffling
(or stupid, not sure which). People have wondered about it before; you
might search Google Groops to try to make sense of it yourself.
Regardless though, Vcc refers to a common positive supply of bipolar ICs
(no
doubt related to a collector). Vdd refers to the common positive supply
of
CMOS circuits (no doubt related to a drain). Vss refers to a common
ground
(no doubt related to a source and therefore CMOS as well). Vee is used
to
refer to a negative supply (no doubt related to an emitter). Since CMOS
is
the most common technology today, if you use Vdd and Vss to describe
your
supplies you will most likely have your symbology right (although anyone
would understand you if you got it wrong, so long as you used the right
equivalent). To be the least ambiguous (and to work towards the
elimination
of symbols which don't seem to make any sense), it might be best to
refer to
signals as +5V or +3.3V and GND.
I think this is the best way, particularly since several voltages may
exist on one schematic. I turn it around so all the tools understand
the nomenclature though. I.e. V5 (+5), V33 (+3.3), V5N (-5V), etc. I
have had to get inventive when I had both +15V and +1.5V on the same
board though. ;-)
Take a tip from the Europeans (resistors, caps, etc) and use 3V3 & 1V5 ;-))