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I'm planning on starting an electronics club at the school where I teach. I'd appreciate any recommendations on which intro electronics book might be best for students. I like Gibilisco, but it is long and maybe more detailed than necessary.
Also some recommendations for basic assembly kits and would be helpful.
We currently have some Snap-Circuit sets for basic stuff which I like due to their being reusable.
Thanks.
Cogito Ergo Credo
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http://www.ciebookstore.com/bookstore/catNo/5/productid/131/addtocart.asp
This course looks like an excellent primer for your students.
I started to study Electronics at 15 years of age.
Used an correspondence N.R.I. course my mom paid for (bless her soul.)
Today I am an EE, now that was a good investment!
Cheers,
Rich
Thanks! I think this is the ticket!!!
Cogito Ergo Credo
One bake sale and the course is paid for!
http://www.ciebookstore.com/bookstore/catNo/5/productid/131/addtocart.asp
The snap kits have decent projects, but the explanations in the instruction manual are so abbreviated as to be worthless. MIght work well if you print out your own explanations. Or maybe you can find projects in the snap kits that illustrate points in the textbook you're using.
A few years ago, I was impressed with the educational value of the instruction manual for the Radio Shack "Electronics Learning Lab" catalog # 28-280, now discontinued. The manual was written by a well-known, now retired electronics writer whose name I forget. I don't know whether the Radio Shack headquarters would still have any.
I would recommend solderless bread boards and an old copy of one of Forrest Mimms Engineer Notebooks.For one breadboard are still the standard for prototyping and it's a good skill to learn. Plus they will get hands on with the parts.
Radio Shack USED to have the manuals for their electronics kit that used a bread board for download, but they do not any more.
I will look and see if I still have the PDF files.When I was in high school we built simple single transistor circuits by first gluing the schematic on a 4x4 piece of wood. Then small copper coated nails were tapped in at the junctions. Passives like resistors, caps, and wires were soldered nail to nail, transistors were on little PCB's with three wires so you did not have worry about soldering them.
The common things like power supply, speakers, lamps or whatever were all prewired with alligator clips so we could just hook them up and go when we were ready.
This was fun and we learned soldering, schematics, component identification, and troubleshooting all at the same time
Edits: 05/11/09
We'll be doing breadboards at some point. I'll check out Mims' works too.
Cogito Ergo Credo
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