22 thoughts on TI And Cadence Make PSpice Free – Hackaday

We like simulation software. Texas Instruments long offered TINA, but recently theyve joined with Cadence to make OrCAD PSpice available for free with some restrictions. Youve probably heard of PSpice its widely used in academia and industry, but is usually quite costly. You can see a promotional overview video below.

The program requires registration and an approval step to get a license key. The downloaded program has TI models along with other standard models. There seem to be few limits as long as you stick to the supplied library. According to the datasheet, there are no size or simulation complexity limitations in that case. If you want to use other models, you can, but thats where the limitations hit you:

There is no limitation of how many 3rd party models can be imported into the design. However, if 3rd party models are imported, a user will be able to plot a maximum of 3 signals at a time of their choice when any 3rd party model is imported from web.

We arent completely sure what from web means there, but presumably they just mean from other sources. In any event, you still get AC, DC, and transient analysis with plenty of options like worst-case timing analysis. Mixed signal designs are supported and there is a wealth of data plotting options, as you would expect.

This is a great opportunity to drive some serious software that is widely used in the industry. The only thing that bummed us out? It runs under Windows. We couldnt get it to work under Wine, but a Windows 10 VM handled it fine, although we really hate running a VM if we dont have to.

Still, the price is right and it is a great piece of software. We also liked the recent Micro-Cap 12 release, but we dont expect any updates for that. Of course, LTSpice is quite capable, too.

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22 thoughts on TI And Cadence Make PSpice Free - Hackaday

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