> Ok, I'll explain again: > > I draw a schematic. > I ran auto route (bottom only) > the result was ok for me. > now I wire some wires on TOP layer and connect between the auto route wires > (2 separate net$) (bottom) with *TOP* wires that are NOT exist in the > schematic (reason: the auto can't handle it) for each wire the eagle ask to > which net$ to connect the "manual" wire I respond and continue to connect > the other "manual" wires. Do you use the "route" command, or the "wire" command? > then I did a rip up cause I want to change one part place and as a result > the "manual" wires cannot be erased. Then the "wires" aren't connected correctly. > I thought the program will add them to the schematic but it didn't, it > becomes the same net$ as I choose when create it. > mean while I found that if I erase the WHOLE net$ in the schematic the > problem is solved, but I have to redraw the original net$ again :-( My guess is that you used the "wire" command rather than the "route" command. One thing to remember is that the routes on the board only correspond electrically to nets on the schematic. I use the "route" command to connect two places on the board that are already connected by the schematic. I use the "ripup" command on the board to remove my own routes (or auto- routed routes that I don't like). -- D. Jay Newman ! jay@sprucegrove.com ! Xander: Giles, don't make cave-slayer unhappy. http://enerd.ws/robots/ ! -- http://www.piclist.com hint: PICList Posts must start with ONE topic: [PIC]:,[SX]:,[AVR]: ->uP ONLY! [EE]:,[OT]: ->Other [BUY]:,[AD]: ->Ads