Sprint Vector is the ultimate competitive VR game: a multiplayer adrenaline platformer that merges the physical thrill of extreme sports competition with the unhinged energy of a zany game show spectacle.
These intense head-to-head matches have become the must-see event of the millennium! Entertainment, Sprint Vector sends its intrepid contestants running, jumping, climbing, flinging, drifting, and even flying across crazy interdimensional race courses and challenge maps where your speed and finesse are put to the test. Hosted by everyone’s favorite robo-personality, Mr.
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SPRINT LAYOUT TO VECTOR SOFTWARE
Posted in Software Hacks Tagged pcb, reverse engineering, scan Post navigation An older version of SprintLayout helped with the Re-Amiga 1200. There are probably an infinite number of ways to attack this. There’s even a repository of old boards recreated in KiCAD. Then you can add the new component and enable the user layer to see the image as you work. The trick is to get the image scaled perfectly and convert it to a component on a user layer. The software is not free, but you can do something somewhat similar in KiCAD. Your speed will be less, but it is still fairly quick to go from a scan to a reasonable layout. Most of the video is sped up, which makes it look as though he’s really fast. One might think the process could be more automated, but it looks as though every piece needs to be touched at least once, but it is still easier than just trying to eyeball everything together. There are tools that make it very easy to place new structures over the original scanned images. You can see the entire process including straightening the original scans. Instead, he used SprintLayout 6.0 which allows you to import pictures and use them as a guide for recreating a PCB layout. It’s true that he could have just manually redrawn everything in a CAD package, but that’s tedious.
SPRINT LAYOUT TO VECTOR PC
Had some scanned pictures of an old Commodore card and wanted to recreate PC boards from it.