

2) Go over the whole BOM and update it with new components (only EOL components) 3) Add a small connector instead of through hole connections 4) Update the schematics 5) Update the layout 6) Gerbers The current PCB was designed using PCAD tool. Right click on the schematic, Options > Sheet., and uncheck the Title Block box. 1) Finding a suitable amplifier instead of the current one.

Use lines and strings to create the fields. In your schematic library, add a new component called Title_Block.You can do that creating a schematic component and introducing the parameters you want. I'll answer but don't worry if someone delete the question. Printing through the preview pane, however, does seem to do the trick.THIS ISN'T A QUESTION ABOUT PROGRAMMING. When transferring the design from the schematic to PCB, Altium Designer provides support for the generation of component and net classes. Printing straight from the OutJob never seems to work for me and I get exactly what you did (a print that doesn't match the PCB dimensions). Instead of clicking "Close" or "Print", click "Preview", and then click "Print" from within the "Preview" window.Up to this point I'm guessing you probably already did all this, but here's the difference: Select your paper size, orientation, and under "Scaling" change the dropdown to "Scaled Print".Right-click the "PCB Prints" line again and this time click "Page Setup".Right-click the "PCB Prints" line that just appeared and select "Configure" to set up which layers you want to print (I'm assuming you already know how to do this).

Under "Documentation Outputs" click "Add New Documentation Output" and select "PCB Prints" -> "".If you haven't already, add an OutJob file to your project by right-clicking it in the Projects pane, selecting "Add New To Project", and choosing "Output Job File".I discovered that the most reliable method for me was to print through the "Preview" panel within the OutJob. I have had this problem a number of times.
