Have to concur with Graham on this. Always roll your own or at least triple check library parts and better still import them into your own libraries after triple checking them. Messed up PCB designs make good coffee mug coasters but rather expensive ones at that! :o) I use Altium Designer and have found issues with the "professional" libraries supplied. If I roll my own or make a mistake in checking, at least the fault is mine but after having done quite a few designs, I can now say this is all in the past since I change my attitude to creating my own. :o) Once you get comfortable in doing library parts it quite a quick and painless exercise to make your own. Dave. From: AVR-Chat@yahoogroups.com [mailto:AVR-Chat@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of bayramdavies Sent: 14 June 2012 20:05 To: AVR-Chat@yahoogroups.com Subject: [AVR-Chat] Re: Eagle CAD question phabib wrote: > I'm learning Eagle CAD ... New Haven Display > NHD-C12832A1Z ... found a .sch file and a .brd > file that uses the display ... haven't been > able to figure out how to go from there ... First, if you are "learning Eagle CAD", you might as well get used to creating your own parts. If a part is wrong, your design will be wrong so you need to take responsibility for this. It is amazing how many parts are wrong, even from "reputable" sources such as the Eagle libraries themselves. Or, if you want to use the part in the schematic / board files you have found, assuming the author is OK with this, then Google something like "Eagle cad export library". Graham. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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RE: [AVR-Chat] Re: Eagle CAD question
2012-06-14 by Dave McLaughlin
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