Here is the model that I use, it works fine in my spice (also command line). Note that you might have to adjust line breaks as a result of the posting.
(I noticed that it seemed that some of the lines where missing, probably because of the way I copied it. It is now corrected).
I am very interested in the reason you can't use Spice with a GUI, including schematic capture. I use one that's totally free, no restrictions, and has a built-in NE555 model. If you are comfortable with command-line Spice, you would love it.
I am very interested in the reason you can't use Spice with a GUI, including schematic capture. I use one that's totally free, no restrictions, and has a built-in NE555 model. If you are comfortable with command-line Spice, you would love it.
I am very interested in the reason you can't use Spice with a GUI, including schematic capture. I use one that's totally free, no restrictions, and has a built-in NE555 model. If you are comfortable with command-line Spice, you would love it.
It looks like there is an extraneous ")" at the end of the line in the model defintion of the PNP.
I suspect that in the "main program" the subcircuit specified should be UA555 instead of LM555.
It took me a while to figure out that the "main program" had to come before the subckt's.
I got thousands of lines of output...
Thanks, it is late here and I am going to bed....
By the way the reason I don't have a GUI is that I am running plain Spice on my Mac.
Yeah, you need to delete the extra ")", and you can change either the subcircuit call or the subcircuit name. They just have to match. It's obvious that whoever posted this did not actually run it. I didn't try to use this model. I copied it from a newsgroup. Caveat emptor!
Isn't it ironic that you don't have a decent Spice for the computer that originated (this may not be strictly true) the GUI? Why can't you run the Pspice demo version?
This is a gr8 software, where from the Design Entry CIS (Capture), you can draw the circuit diagram and do the simulation there itself. Capture has a plugin for PSpice, so you can directly do the simulation in Capture itself. No coding and other head-aches.