On Sun, 11 Nov 2007 07:56:21 -0800, John Larkin
On Sun, 11 Nov 2007 01:32:07 -0800, D from BC
On Sat, 10 Nov 2007 19:35:26 -0800, John Larkin
On Sat, 10 Nov 2007 19:55:00 -0600, John Fields
On Sat, 10 Nov 2007 14:40:51 -0700, Jim Thompson
On Sat, 10 Nov 2007 11:42:31 -0800, John Larkin
On Sat, 10 Nov 2007 11:57:19 -0700, Jim Thompson
[snip]
Now please present us with your "solution" with component names and
values and I'll simulate it side-by-side with my design.
I rarely simulate. Design is the reverse of simulation. Design forces
the desired results, so why simulate?
[snip]
So you've been converted to the Bob Pease school of hand waving ?
My POV: Design puts the idea onto paper. Simulation proves that what
is on the paper really works. But simulators don't "design". In my
business, simulation "proof" is required for each and every process
corner, otherwise the customer doesn't "buy".
---
I used to be in Larkin's corner, defending "build and test" over
"simulate", but after writing a few simulators to solve specific
problems posed here on sed, which couldn't be solved, practically,
any other way, I decided to lay down my wire-wrap gun until the
machine worked in the computer.
Then, along came wonderful, free LTSPICE.
I've designed stuff using it which I never had to physically build,
but which worked and which I got paid for, which is a joy.
A feeling I'm sure you enjoyed before I did.
An asynchronous circuit like this, and even moreso some of the others
that gave been posted, has internal delays and is subject to all
possible timings in the chatter zone. Spice can't really test all the
possible combinations of timings. You can generate a chatter
simulator, but you can't be sure its deterministic behavior represents
the real world of arbitrary timings. Complex async circuits can have
low-probability picosecond-wide windows of hazard.
John
I got inspired by that differentiator + schmitt invertor sketch of
yours.
The idea was to move the signal into the hysteresis levels.
I though I'd try doing the opposite..Moving the hystersis levels to
meet the signal..
Check out my hysteretic hairball! :O *
http://www.members.shaw.ca/chainsaw/SED/compsolution.jpg
569Kb
Yeah, I was thinking along those lines. This is a "feed-beside" sort
of concept, a brutally fast forward path, with slower tweaks off to
the side to fix the low-speed defects. This was the concept Tek used
in their 7000 series oscilloscopes.
I was also thinking that the origical hysteresis idea was OK except
that the hyst band of cmos schmitts is poorly defined. That's fixable
by defining it better, namely by adding additional hysteresis. The
numbers ought to work.
John
Damn...that's right...This is freakn scope trigger tech...

I didn't notice.
Bummer...

I'm reinventing the wheel again.
Now I'm wondering if I could have cheated and looked up oscilloscope
trigger circuit patents to dodge a whole lot of dinking with gates, D
ff's and one shots.
There should be ooodles of trigger art since the invention of the
oscilloscope.
What to do.....
Use time sifting through mountains of patents
versus
use time designing from scratch..