Pspice Student Version High Quality -

Enter (officially known as PSpice for TI or the free Cadence PSpice offering).

| Feature | Student Version Limit | | :--- | :--- | | | ~ 100-200 nodes (depending on version) | | Transistor Count | ~ 100 active devices | | Speed | Slower than Pro version | | Modeling | No advanced behavioral modeling | pspice student version

You cannot simulate an entire ARM processor or a full switching power supply with 500 components. But for homework, class projects, and senior design sub-circuits (filters, amplifiers, oscillators), it is perfect. Pro Tips for Beginners (Avoid my mistakes) 1. Ground Everything PSpice is ruthless. If you forget to place a ground (0V reference) on your schematic, the simulation will throw a "Floating Node" error and refuse to run. Every circuit needs at least one ground. Enter (officially known as PSpice for TI or

PSpice Student Version isn't perfect. The user interface looks like it was designed in 2003, and it crashes if you click too fast. But for $0.00, it gives you access to the same simulation engine that designs fighter jets and medical devices. Pro Tips for Beginners (Avoid my mistakes) 1

If you are an Electrical Engineering student or a recent graduate, you’ve probably heard the name whispered in labs or shouted in frustration during deadline week.