Reddit Reddit reviews High Speed Signal Propagation: Advanced Black Magic

We found 5 Reddit comments about High Speed Signal Propagation: Advanced Black Magic. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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High Speed Signal Propagation: Advanced Black Magic
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5 Reddit comments about High Speed Signal Propagation: Advanced Black Magic:

u/greenlambda · 9 pointsr/ECE

I'm mostly self-taught, so I've learned to lean heavily on App Notes, simulations, and experience, but I also like these books:
The Howard Johnson Books:
High Speed Digital Design: A Handbook of Black Magic
https://www.amazon.com/dp/0133957241/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_I0Iwyb99K9XCV
High Speed Signal Propagation: Advanced Black Magic
https://www.amazon.com/dp/013084408X/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_c3IwybKSBFYVA

Signal and Power Integrity - Simplified (2nd Edition)
https://www.amazon.com/dp/0132349795/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_J3IwybAAG9BWV

Also, another thing that can be overlooked is PCB manufacturability. It's vitally important to understand exactly what can and can't be manufactured so that you can make design trade offs, and in order to do that you need to know how they are made. As a fairly accurate intro, I like the Eurocircuits videos:
http://www.eurocircuits.com/making-a-pcb-pcb-manufacture-step-by-step

u/fatangaboo · 7 pointsr/ECE

For your job? Spend the money or get your boss to spend the money on the books written by Howard Johnson.

(book 1)

(book 2)

Trivialized and unsatisfying answer to the question in the title of this thread: Vbounce = Lground * dI/dt . You think Lground equals zero but you are mistaken.

u/hwillis · 6 pointsr/electronics

Can't use free eagle (too big) for this, but kicad or probably other things would work. With a few good books you can lay out a big board without advanced tools, although it can take longer. With cheap/free tools you'll usually have to use some finicky or kludgy methods to do really complex routing (blind/buried vias, free vias, heat transfer, trace length), but that usually isn't too big a deal. Here's a timelapse of a guy using Altium to route a high speed, large (a bit smaller than op's) data board for a high speed camera. The description has rough steps with timestamps- 38 hours total to lay out.

u/erasmus42 · 3 pointsr/rfelectronics
u/dijumx · 3 pointsr/electronics

What about the follow up book?