You'll notice that the resistor+capacitor in line for RDY are oriented differently. The resistor stands off the board while the capacitor lays on it. I laid the capacitor down so the current flow would be relatively parallel, and I'm considering doing the same for the resistor, is this necessary? Or should I just make them both vertical?
The resistor's resistance will dwarf the small added inductance you get from standing it up; so don't worry about it.
Ah, that's probably the catch with it, I assume that's probably why the "T" is tacked onto the name, for TTL levels like the HCT. I'll check out the data sheet and report back what it's logic 1 output is.
The "T" normally refers to the
input thresholds, not the output. So for example 2.5V at the input of a 74HCTxx part will be in solid '1' territory, whereas for 74HCxx, it would be undefined. WDC's processors' data sheets say they need 70% of Vcc to get a valid '1', which at 5V is 3.5V. Some here have challenged that assertion, saying their observation is that it can handle lower-voltage 1's ok. I have not tested it myself, and even if I found it to be true in the unit(s) I test, I might not want to trust that
all their units will always perform that way.