Rob Watts
Member of the Trade: Chord Electronics
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So SPICE simulations can be very accurate - if your parameter data is detailed and accurate, and that is a big if! It is a modelling simulation, so unlike a Verilog digital simulation for the FPGA (which is 100% accurate), it will have some inaccuracies. But, if you are doing straight forward work, it is excellent - but the problems come with very high gain bandwidth, and with modelling parasitics (that is stray capacitances, inductances to the board and other components).
Discrete amplifiers are fine for simple stuff, but I had a complex, very high gain bandwidth circuit that worked in simulation but failed in practice due to parasitics. And that's where it's better to use op-amps rather than discrete components as the parasitics are defined and part of the operation of the design.
Discrete amplifiers are fine for simple stuff, but I had a complex, very high gain bandwidth circuit that worked in simulation but failed in practice due to parasitics. And that's where it's better to use op-amps rather than discrete components as the parasitics are defined and part of the operation of the design.