Hi,
I'd like to start a list of freely (and legaly) available electronics primer and course material, books and other stuff, similar to the datasheet database.
There were some great links in various topics but they get easily lost.
freetechbooks.com has dozens of books on various topics.
Mostly computer sciences, programming and mathematics but also electric circuits and signal processing.
New material are added, a RSS feed is availible.
NEETS (Navy electricity and electronics training series)
linkThe Complete NEETS (Navy electricity and electronics training series) is available here http://www.phy.davidson.edu/instrumentation/NEETS.htm in PDF which you can download for FREE.Answers to asignments are NOT included if you are not 100% certain your answer is correct reread the lesson ALL answers are in the text.If you get stuck post on the forum.The module you need (for multivibrators ) is #9, but all are worth a read.
While it is from one specific company (hopefully not seen as spam, I promise I don't work for them) the tutorials on Sparkfun's website are pretty good. (
http://www.sparkfun.com/tutorials) The bite-sized tutorials in particular are nice for good information packed into small space for a quick read in your spare time. Not as much detail as you would get in, say, Horowitz and Hill, or even some of the other resources listed here, but a good place to start.
Thanks for the correction on the link I posted.
I'm surprised nobody has mentioned the MIT course materials on EE and CS:
http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/electrical-engineering-and-computer-science/I just watched (yes, video) the first lecture from 6.002 (Circuits and Electronics) and I'm hooked! Especially at the end when Prof. Agarwal made a pickle glow
. I can't believe I can get MIT education for free.
Then you have the Stanford SEE (more CS oriented)
http://see.stanford.edu/see/courses.aspxOther schools have similar programs, but on the few I checked, they didn't have any electronics related material.
A mate of mine runs the Radio and Electronics School,
www.res.net.au. It's mainly set up for students to gain their Amateur Radio licence, but you learn quite a bit about electronics as well, oh and it's free! It's run by volunteers. You can also join a Yahoo group for students to ask questions etc. Tell Ron Raff sent you!
Regards,
Raff.
I had another thouht.. yes I know 2!!! What about Talking Electronics?
www.talkingelectronics.comVery well written stuff here, I love the way Colin puts it together, I have all of the old Talking Electronics magazines at home here, and even the 2 computer projects as well, and yes they still work!
Regards,
Raff.
This is amazing electronics forum, thanks guys
I'm looking a good smps book, is anyone know where can I find switch mode power supply book ?
hello..friends...this is amazing forum..
this is one site which is useful :::www.electronics-lab.com
and for beginners they should refer book :: boylstead.
Hi, and thank you very much. I was searching for exactly this, books for beginners with the basics. I now have a lot of reference books. I was on my local book store but everything was too advanced and confusing for me. Keep the great work up
I'm surprised nobody has mentioned the MIT course materials on EE and CS:
http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/electrical-engineering-and-computer-science/
I just watched (yes, video) the first lecture from 6.002 (Circuits and Electronics) and I'm hooked! Especially at the end when Prof. Agarwal made a pickle glow . I can't believe I can get MIT education for free.
Then you have the Stanford SEE (more CS oriented)
http://see.stanford.edu/see/courses.aspx
My first thought when I saw this thread was about the MIT OpenCourseWare. Great stuff. And in some of the cases, even the textbooks are available in electronic format (view only obviously). I see the above mentioned 6.002 is one of them.
If I could only keep one of my books on electronics, This would be it:
http://www.amazon.com/Practical-Electronics-Inventors-Paul-Scherz/dp/0071452818/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1319339386&sr=1"-1 Practical electronics for inventors by Paul Scherz.
It is the "Art of Electronics" for the rest of us normal intelligence folk. Even though it has many obvious errors it covers all aspects of electronics and goes into great depth on components. Every type of a component (carbon, wire wound, thin film, thick film, ceramic , etc.) is explained and why you would or would not use it. There is both graphical analogy explanation of electronic principals and the mathematical. Much of the info are very important topics that I have not seen anywhere else . It is the one book that will stay on your bench.
I'm a complete beginner, therefore this thread is very useful for me. When I have time I will look through the primers. I bet they are really useful and avoid that I will came back and ask stupid questions in the forum. Thank you for this
Although it could happen that I have some further questions, I hope this is OK then!
I'm looking a good smps book, is anyone know where can I find switch mode power supply book ?
I have this one : "HIGH-FREQUENCY SWITCHING POWER SUPPLIES : THEORY AND DESIGN" by George Chryssis - McGraw-Hill
It's a little outdated and I don't know if a newer edition is available (mine is the second edition, circa 1989?)
Search on Amazon. You can find it and other, more recent books.
I forgot to mention there is a suppliment (sort of) to the Op-Amps for Everyone reference; it is called the "Handbook of Operational Amplifiers Applications". It can be found here:
http://www.ti.com/lit/an/sboa092a/sboa092a.pdfTogether, these two references will describe everything you will ever need to know about op-amps!
Heres a really usefull link that downloads a .PDF document for a design of a DSPIC33F series DSP Educational Signal Processing Platform....
http://spinlab.wpi.edu/projects/dspboard/final.pdf"A Major Qualifying Project Report
submitted to the Faculty of
WORCESTER POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE
in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the
Degree of Bachelor of Science"