2. Untuk dapat merancang PCB yang berfungsi sesuai rencana salah satu unsur
mendasar yang terpenting kesesuaian antara dimensi komponen pada rancangan
PCB dengan fisik komponen yang sesungguhnya akan dipergunakan.
Masing-masing software memiliki sistem/cara penamaan tersendiri terhadap
komponen-komponen (PCB footprint). Salah satu contoh adalah library dari Eagle,
yang walaupun umum tersedia dari berbagai sumber tetapi memiliki sistem
penamaan yang cukup unik. Terutama bagi yang belum pernah menemui pola
seperti ini sebelumnya.
23. http://pikirsa.wordpress.com/2011/08/01/eagle-component-package-sebuah-catatan-pencarian/
“With regards to the resistors, when you are looking through the ‘resistor’ library the parts have a ‘type’. The
First half is the width in mm (at least for the EU parts) and the second part is the length. The ‘grid’ is the
distance between the two solder holes.
For example, a 0309/10 resistor is 3mm in diameter, with a 9mm length and the holes are set 10mm apart.
Therefore, simply measure your resistor and use something similar.”
sumber: a.d. http://arduino.cc/forum/index.php?topic=66609.0
“(1 W/0207 size to > 3 W/0617 size)” …
And what does type 207 mean? I know it a package but I don’t see 207 in the data sheet. What does
types 204, 207, 309, 411 mean? …
<<>> It is the diameter and size of the resistor body in centimeters. So the 1. value in your example
means 1 Watt and body size 2×7 Milimeters = 0,2×0,7 Centimeters. Forget the x and commas and you
have 0207. (Like you write 2k7 for a resistor value of 2.7 kilo ohms).
The 3 Watts resistor has a body of 6×17 milli- or 0,6×1,7 centimeters. Since it is not really healthy for a
resistor to bend the wires sharp at the body you leave a milimeter or two before you bend them as seen at
page 4 of your pdf-file. So this leads to the “/value”. If you check the eagle rcl.lbr pick a resistor 0207/7 and
a 207/15 and place them in the schematic. They look alike but if you switch to brd you will notice the
differece. The bodies are equal but the wires have a different length. So the value behind the / is the grid
size of the part.
sumber: http://www.eaglecentral.ca/forums/
24. http://pikirsa.wordpress.com/2011/08/01/eagle-component-package-sebuah-catatan-pencarian/
The general purpose fixed resistor devices are called either R-US (if you like the US zigzag line type of schematics
symbol) or R-EU (if you prefer the European simple rectangle.] The package options are numerous, but make sense after
you realize that there’s a common format: “WWLL/SS” where WW is the body width, LL is the body length, and SS is the
hole spacing, all in truncated millimeters.
A typical 1/4W resistor measures about 2.5mm in diameter and 7mm long; hole spacing depends on how you bend the
leads. So R-US0207/10 is a 1/4W resistor with 10mm (actually 4*2.54, or 10.16mm, since we want to stay close to a 0.1
inch (2.54mm) grid.) R-US0207/2V is the same resistor mounted vertically with 2.54mm lead spacing. 1/8W resistors are
similarly designated R-US_0204/SS”
…
Capacitors are worse than resistors, largely because their bodies come in a wider variety of shapes (that are less
standardized), and of course there are all those different types; disk, ceramic, mylar, film, electrolytic, tantalum, AC filter,
etc (and those are just the FIXED value caps!) Again, threre are slightly different US and European schematic symbols C-
US and C-EU in rcl.lib.
Again, there’s a plethora of packages, but there’s a standard format. In this case it’s SSS-WWWXLLL, where SSS is the
lead spacing (with an extra digit this time!), WWW is the body width, and LLL is the body length.
Polarized caps are similar (CPOL-US or CPOL-EU in rcl.lbr), with a package name like TSSS-DD, where T is a type
designator (E for electrolytics, TT for tantalum drops, for instance) SSS is the spacing again (only now it probably has an
actual decimal point!), and DD is the diameter (for radial caps).
sumber: “Draw Electronic Schematics with CadSoft EAGLE” by westfw on August 6, 2006.
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