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(also called PCB reference designators)
You've seen circuit boards with cryptic little white words like "R129" and "C17". Those are the reference designators. You may already know what the "R" and "C" stand for -- but what are these parts labeled "Z1" and "Z2" ? And when I'm making a new board, how should I label this polyfuse ?
reference designators (Is ``reference designations'' the same thing ?) [general PWB design]
-- "John M. Cardone" on 2001-02-14Here's a search result link from IEEE which has the full pdf versions (see items 40 and 41) If the link doesn't come across go to http://ieeexplore.ieee.org and search on "reference designations" I couldn't find the spec at ANSI's site either. Regards jmc
Dennis Saputelli wrote ``Z for a zener and TZ for a tranzorb''
Graphic Symbols, Designations and Units http://standards.ieee.org/reading/ieee/std_public/description/gsdu/
-- Abd ul-Rahman Lomax on 2001-02-14 12:48:03 PM>the real fun comes in trying to get J $ P to be logical and consistent
It's much easier than one might think, though most engineers don't know the standard.
The primary distinguishing characteristic is that J is stationary and P is mobile. If both J and P are mobile, or are equivalent stationary, which usually means cables floating around to be connected together, then P is male and J is female.
That's the standard. I'd add that if male and female are not distinguishable, as with some connectors which have both pins (male) and sockets (female), then I would make the hot connector (powered when unconnected) J and the other P, if there is any difference, which is what one would do anyway with good connector design.
I.e., the wall socket is J and the lamp plug is P, because:
- (1) The wall socket is stationary.
- (2) The wall socket is female.
- (3) The wall socket is powered.
So an extension cord has a P on the end which goes into the wall, and a J on the other end, even though both ends are [mobile].
A:
``For the existing board, dblclk on one of the designators, click on Global, change it from "all free primitives" to "all primitives", and make the change you want. It should change them all.
For future defaults, go to Default Primitives, Component, and select the Designator tab. Then just set the size you want there.'' -- Steve Hendrix on 2001-04-02 05:25:38 AM
Baldwin Technologies PCB Design Check List http://www.baldwin-tech.com/checklis.htm suggests
All reference designators will be renumbered from left to right, top to bottom, starting with the lowest reference designator number. ... (Not all customers want their PCB’s to be renumbered)
end http://massmind.org/techref/pwb_reference_designators.htm
Comments:
Questions:
+ ... a gEDA user notes that "On the assembly drawing, you center the reference designators inside the component boxes" -- for example, see the assembly guide and PCB for megasquirt and see how the ref designators are centered underneath the components. ... SparkFun says "We don't actually use part indicators (R1, R2, C13, etc) on many of our tightly packed boards." (they only show up on paper, on the much-larger-than-life assembly drawings) ...
file: /Techref/pwb_reference_designators.htm, 7KB, , updated: 2009/6/23 11:14, local time: 2024/11/9 18:19,
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