Paper about designing toroidal transformers by Nasa circa 1972
Anyone knows a good resource for soldering components in laptops?
A lot of information about various sensors, transmitters (temperature, mechanical specifications, photo effects, thermocouples, etc.):
http://senphys.com/
A list of Youtube electronic channels provided by Cliff Matthews (thanks Cliff)
(there are a few unrelated ones such as mechanical engineering)
/DRIVE
AA Computers and Technology
Abelardo Pardo
Abom79
Afrotechmods
AintBigAintClever
Alan Garfield
AllAmericanFiveRadio
AndyDaviesByTheSea
APH Group (
www.aphgroup.com)
Applied Science
Arrow Electronics
AvE
bigclivedotcom
Blue Matter
Brek Martin
Bridgewater
Chris Ball
Chris Gammell
ChrisFix
Consumer Reports
Craig Hollinger
CrashCourse
CSTworld
CuriousInventor
Cypress Semiconductor
Delcopond
Derek Molloy
DextersLab2013
DIY Perks
DOCUMENTARY TUBE
Dr. Ray Ridley
DrPhysicsA
EdisonTechCenter
EEEnthusiast
EEVblog
EEVblog2
El Colo Tronics
ElectroBOOM
Electronics Trivia by Steve Wagner
electronicsNmore
electronupdate
ElPaso TubeAmps
Engineering Explained
Gauthier Electric Oakville
Gerry Sweeney
Grants Pass TV Repair
GreatScott!
humanHardDrive
Hydraulic Press Channel
iantube
IBM Internet of Things
iFixit Video
Inténtalo Carito
Jack Ganssle
Jeremy Blum
jimmydiresta
joe smith
John Gammell
John Ward
Joop Brokking
Julian Ilett
Julian's Reviews
Kevin Darrah
Keysight Oscilloscopes
Khan Academy
khanacademymedicine
Kristian_Laholm
LabVIEW
LabVIEW MakerHub
lasersaber
Learn Engineering
Lectures by Walter Lewin
Lonnie Honeycutt
Louis Rossmann
Luís R
Make:
Mega Mechatronics
mikeselectricstuff
minutephysics
misperry
MIT OpenCourseWare
mjlorton
N2CUA
Nerdwriter1
NightHawkInLight
Node7
Novaspirit Tech
Nucleus Medical Media
Onstate LED Lighting
Patrick Hood-Daniel
Peter Oakes
Physics Videos by Eugene Khutoryansky
PSoC Projects
psocapps
PSoCDesigner
Quantum Leaps, LLC
RimstarOrg
RLScience
roberhiy2
Robert Bolanos
ROBRENZ
RODALCO2007
rolinychupetin
Roman UrsuHack
Scotty Kilmer
Scullcom Hobby Electronics
SDG Electronics
ShopJimmy.com
Shotcut
SmarterEveryDay
State of Electronics
Steven Casagrande
Suspicious0bservers
Tampatec
Tech Explorations
Techmoan
Technology - Topic
Techquickie
TemasInteresantes
tesla500
The 8-Bit Guy
The Andrew Klavan Show
The Post Apocalyptic Inventor
The Radio Shop
The Signal Path
The Slow Mo Guys
Theology, Philosophy and Science
Thunderf00t
Tim Williams
Timothy Schulz
Todd Harrison
TodoElectronica21
Veritasium
vk3ye
VoltLog
Vsauce
w2aew
wattnotions
WebTegrity
Wranglerstar
Sorry if a few channel names were straggler's unrelated to EE.. Perhaps someone may do a list in MPU's and FPGA's related to coding.
You have Hydraulic Press Channel in the list
Sorry if a few channel names were straggler's unrelated to EE.. Perhaps someone may do a list in MPU's and FPGA's related to coding.
You have Hydraulic Press Channel in the list
Awe shucks, that's just anger management. You ever think some bad EE projects may need fluid force before tossing in the trash?
Sorry if a few channel names were straggler's unrelated to EE.. Perhaps someone may do a list in MPU's and FPGA's related to coding.
You have Hydraulic Press Channel in the list
Awe shucks, that's just anger management. You ever think some bad EE projects may need fluid force before tossing in the trash?
good reason I guess lol, your project doesn't work? crash it in hydraulic press!
Actually I am looking for MCU links
You may want to add to an item I posted in sub-forum MCU's & FPGA's about the need for a resource sticky there too. It's funny how folks that type so much (coding) had no resource list to help out with the basic stuff.. Maybe they like asking and answering the same questions over and over? I don't know..
Hi ez24, good idea. Long messy url's should be hidden and a short description can be given instead, like this (thanks to Ian.M for lending me his brain):
[url=http://www.example.com/anypage]description text for link goes here[/url]
Wish I could offer more, but I leave for the Caribbean Tuesday (I've just 3-weeks to forget about the Canadian snow..)
OpenStax was started by Rice University. They write openly licensed college textbooks. Limited subjects available. But, what they do have avail is very good (Calculus, Statistics, Chemistry, Physics, etc):
https://openstax.org/subjects
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An optional additional explanation is:
coursera.org has some pretty good lectures from georgia tech!
CODE, by Charles Petzold, if no one else mentioned it. Although it deals with understanding code, it also goes through logic, relays and other EE-related things.
Added to the YT list using a new method
Selecting
Inductors for DC/DC convertors - Wurth Electronics Group
This is also available in German
There's
other training video's worth watching too (mostly English).
Newark offering free 233 pg. ebook: RECOM´s DC/DC Book of Knowledge
(for those who don't have an account, or don't want to be pestered to give out an email address..)
1st PDF - Introduction to various DC/DC converter topologies, feedback loops (analogue and digital), test and measurement, protection, filtering, safety, reliability, constant current drivers and DC/DC applications. The level is necessarily technical, but readable for engineers, designers and students."
http://storage.pardot.com/80762/59552/Recom_Book_DCDC_Power.pdf
2nd PDF - More info on author Steve Roberts - Technical Director for RECOM
https://d3i5bpxkxvwmz.cloudfront.net/pulse/07-2015_Pulse_15_spreads.pdf
DC/DC BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE is out in a new version with a new chapter on magnetics.
https://www.recom-power.com/emea/downloads/bok.htmlIn English
http://www.recom-power.com/fileadmin/EMEA/Downloads/Book_of_Knowledge/BookOfKnowledge_EN_WEB.pdfIn German
http://www.recom-power.com/fileadmin/EMEA/Downloads/Book_of_Knowledge/BookOfKnowledge_DE_WEB.pdf