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In article k.net, "KØHB"
writes: Several years ago ARRL marketed a WIN3.xx software package called "Radio Designer" which was a 'lite' copy of a commercial RF design program. Unfortunately the program does not run under 16- and 32-bit Windows environments, and the OEM is not interested in entering into further arrangements with ARRL. Does anyone know of a similar program in a price range (under $500) attractive to hams? Zero cost ought to be attractive? :-) Linear Technology Corporation has a free download version of their LTspice / SwitcherCAD III at http://www.linear.com This is a standard SPICE plus the addition of switching power supply section (using Linear's PSU ICs of course). The SPICE part runs the same as everyone else's SPICE which has been optimized for speed of execution. Mine runs fine on a Windows 98 platform...as well as the Windows XP on my wife's H-P machine. The SPICE core is total freeware and that was Pedersen's request at Berkeley. Other folks have taken the free core and established their own Windows menus, pop-downs, and output formatting; that part is individually copyrighted...like copyrighting fancy wrapping paper for a present. :-) "Radio Designer" has a SPICE core. There are several SPICE "lite" versions available for free as demos, all with "limited" component count, number of nodes, etc., etc. Those limitations do not hinder a complex several-transistor plus several standard IC circuit combination analysis. You can even get freebie CDs in the mail on request of these demo versions. I have such as well as the SPICE core source code in both C and FORTRAN. If you are only interested in frequency-domain circuit analysis and want an on-screen simulation circuit control (add, delete, insert, modify values) along with some macromodels within, I can send you my (formerly) shareware version of LINEA. LINEA is DOS-level, looks monochrome, is not attractive in looks but the answers are on-the-money out to double precision. At DOS level operation, it is relatively immune to Windows versions' differences; LINEA was originally written on a Spectra 70 mainframe and eventually ported to a PC running Windows 3.1 at DOS level. LINEA is very small as program packages go, roughly 150 K...pretty cosmetics take up many megabytes. LHA |
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