Unlike modern textbooks that spend 50 pages explaining Ohm's Law, this book is a . It assumes you know how to read a schematic and can tell a resistor from a capacitor.
Imagine a 14-year-old in 1985, sitting in a basement lit by a single fluorescent bulb. He has a breadboard, a bag of components, and a goal: to build a "lie detector" for the upcoming science fair. Unlike modern textbooks that spend 50 pages explaining
The handbook is divided into several sections, each covering a specific area of electronics. Some of the sections include: a bag of components
One major fear for beginners: "The circuit uses a 'CA3140' op-amp. I can't find that." Unlike modern textbooks that spend 50 pages explaining