dieselvette
Electrical
- Oct 6, 2006
- 26
I currently am building the self-contained control system for a relatively simple machine which we build from the ground up.
I am wondering if there are any good programs out there which allow me to draw a wiring diagram quickly and easily. I would prefer the diagram to be laid out as "picture", showing each component & its terminals, with wires running from component to component. (Similar to what you see in factory service manuals for automotive/machinery/etc.) The diagram would be used primarily for troubleshooting, and for record-keeping purposes as each machine is different.
It would be easy to make a ladder diagram, but I have yet to talk to a service/maintenance technician who is willing to decipher it.
It would really be cool if the program was able to convert such a diagram to ladder logic or something, or have some kind of "simulation" mode. I am doing control wiring here, not discrete electronics, so maybe that's a little out of reach.
Just something where you are drawing more than just a picture. Then components can be moved around on the drawing board without having to re-draw everything.
I've tried Microsoft Visio (ick!) and we have AutoCAD, which both work OK, but I would like to draw more than just a picture sometimes.
Nic Van Engen
Electrical Technician
I am wondering if there are any good programs out there which allow me to draw a wiring diagram quickly and easily. I would prefer the diagram to be laid out as "picture", showing each component & its terminals, with wires running from component to component. (Similar to what you see in factory service manuals for automotive/machinery/etc.) The diagram would be used primarily for troubleshooting, and for record-keeping purposes as each machine is different.
It would be easy to make a ladder diagram, but I have yet to talk to a service/maintenance technician who is willing to decipher it.
It would really be cool if the program was able to convert such a diagram to ladder logic or something, or have some kind of "simulation" mode. I am doing control wiring here, not discrete electronics, so maybe that's a little out of reach.
Just something where you are drawing more than just a picture. Then components can be moved around on the drawing board without having to re-draw everything.
I've tried Microsoft Visio (ick!) and we have AutoCAD, which both work OK, but I would like to draw more than just a picture sometimes.
Nic Van Engen
Electrical Technician