Stripboard Magic
Stripboard Magic is a Windows application for designing PCB layouts on stripboard (aka prototyping board, aka Veroboard). It was released by a British company called Ambyr which ceased trading a long time ago.
The interface is a quite primitive and a little strange but the program is functional even on Windows XP. It also works great under wine in Linux, at least with version 0.9.38 and above as this is all I have checked. It should probably work on older versions too. I haven’t tried it on Vista though.
It can be a handy program when called upon and I have successfully used it a few times when throwing together random small circuits. Due to the interface I would imagine it to be a bit clumsy for very large circuits. The biggest gripe I have with it is the inability to change the orientation of components on the board, so some circuits tend to be slightly larger than they need to be.
I downloaded a copy of Stripboard Magic 1.0 back in the 90’s and recently just found it lying about on my computer. As I would consider it to well and truly be abandonware and as it seems to be a little sought after by some hobbyists I have provided a link to download it below.
[download id=”5624″]
Here are some screenshots showing the schematic view (top) and board layout view (bottom):
Stripboard Designer
Another hard to find app these days is Stripboard Designer, mirrored here for people who wish to use it.
[download id=”5626″]
[download id=”5628″]
hi to all at http://www.experimental-engineering.co.uk i thought i had sent this newyears eve but it didnt send so i have sent it again all things good for the new year to every one
– matty g
Your comment not appearing was most likely due to our anti-spam measures, as they are pretty harsh. Thanks
Stipboard Magic works up to Windows 10 32bit but not 64bit
Hi Peet,
Good to know, I hadn’t even tried this on anything past Windows 7, as I’m a Linux user.
(Wine to the rescue!).
I can confirm Stripboard magic happily runs under a VM (I am using XP for my Guest OS). So you can run it using software like VMware Player (which is free for non-commercial use).