Oh yes, I agree completely.
I imagine myself sitting on the back of a giant parrot with diarrhoea,
flapping around helplessly squawking "Real radio ham, real radio ham" and
flying around the circuit as I design it.
I find by far that is the best way to ensure that my circuits work.
I can only attribute the success of my circuits to the grand old
polymethylene that I drink whilst sitting on the back of the grand parrot
being fed on air beans.
Sqwark.
"Polymath" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:42dea6ca$(E-Mail Removed)...
>I wonder how many of you out there who design
> circuits imagine yourself riding on an electron as it whizzes
> through the circuit as part of your analytic or diagnostic process?
>
> I find this thought process to be particularly useful in software, of
> all things, imagining being in the midst of the data as it is flowing
> about
> me.
>
> This thought process recurred to me in recent days when thinking about
> microwave circuits where the "tuned ccts" may be little more than
> transmission
> line segments. In trying to picture resonances where the resonance effect
> is
> that of a standing wave, I find it helps to be "in there".
>
>
>
>
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