Click the FIND button and you should see several items now displayed in red. This allows you to enter up to three signal paths and they will be shown as the related colors. There's two other lines that you can also specify that will be in GREEN or ORANGE. Use the Find/Find Net (By Net Name) command and enter smb_data in the first line (caps not sensitive). Why "U42"? That's the part name used in the schematic. Open the file and use the Find/Find Component Part (or hotkey D) to enter U42. An example would be one system using Intel graphics, versus another that uses ATI. BDV file matches the schematic sometimes there's different motherboards used in the same model. The board view program is used with the associated schematic diagram as the part numbers and signal names are embedded into the. From left to right:Īll of these actions should all be self-explanatory. If there's a hotkey associated with the action, it's also displayed. In any event, hovering over the icons under the menu line will tell you what they do.
To prevent that, simply work on a copy of the original file. From there, about the only thing that can go wrong is that you overwrite, if the program allows it, the data file.
#LANDREX BOARD VIEW HOW TO#
I don't see any connections, any part-numbers, any text, any indication what a particular rectangle might be.ĭouble-clicking on a dot marks it with a random(?) number, no idea where to go from there.Have you not thought about exploring what the various menu options are? If you can see the board view, then you at least know how to open a file. RealBlackStuff wrote:All that those boardviews show are rectangles and dots, no matter how big you try to make them.