![]() ![]() ![]() We did a lot of training on GE Solid State Logic systems. Some of the equipment (PLCs) used was programmed in Boolean, and almost all of the students were able to pick up Boolean. My students were mostly journeyman electricians who had previous experience with line diagrams and found them easy to work with. The two main protocols that I remember were Boolean algebra and line diagram schematics showing the actual wiring connections in a relay based logic system. I am not sure if this will help, but I had a little experience with logic systems way back when. RE: Logic Simulator waross (Electrical) 16 Dec 17 14:48 Pacing will be driven by external software and I can afford to run the whole thing slowly enough that I think I don't need the simulation to address timing issues.Ī. Other information: The aim of the project is to expand the DIO capability of one of my dataloggers to be able to read and write a much larger number of discrete lines. Ideally, I'd like something that was easy to pick up (I don't see me doing this very often, so it would be a fresh learning curve every time) and that came with a reasonably comprehensive component library. I've used LTSpice from time to time, but wondered which of the Logic equivalents people would recommend. I think I want to run a simulator on my pc. It feels like I ought to be able to to do better than that now. I'm looking to lash together a collection of decoders and multiplexers (probably 74 series TTL, but I'm not settled on that yet) in a way I haven't done for 30+ years.īack then, the development process involved a lot of mistake making (sometimes followed by buying new hardware) on a breadboard.
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