Low-Cost Test Equipment Projects You Can Build

Low-Cost Test Equipment Projects You Can Build
Author: Delton T. Horn
Publisher: Tab Books
Total Pages: 200
Release: 1992
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 9780830641550

Everyone who works with electronic circuitry on a regular basis needs test equipment. But commercially sold meters and probes are very expensive, and often more than the average home experimenter needs. This money-saving project book aims to solve that dilemma by providing plans and instructions for building two dozen inexpensive test instruments - both analog and digital - for the workbench.

Build Your Own Test Equipment

Build Your Own Test Equipment
Author: Carl J. Bergquist
Publisher: Prompt
Total Pages: 294
Release: 1998
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 9780790611303

Contains information on how to build several pragmatic testing devices. Designed to be highly practical and space conscious, this book uses only commonly available components. Numerous construction tips are included, as pesky anomalies crop up in every project.

Simple, Low-cost Electronics Projects

Simple, Low-cost Electronics Projects
Author: Fred Blechman
Publisher: Elsevier
Total Pages: 225
Release: 1998-08-20
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 0080517145

Fred's explanations are clear, readable, and friendly. Each project comes with a complete discussion of circuit theory, circuit board and parts placement layouts, excellent hints on building and testing each circuit, suggestions for packaging, and a complete parts list. Few things are as satisfying as when an electronic device you built yourself comes to life when you flip the "On" switch. You're guaranteed success with this essential book on your workbench!

Build Your Own Electronics Workshop

Build Your Own Electronics Workshop
Author: Thomas Petruzzellis
Publisher: McGraw Hill Professional
Total Pages: 448
Release: 2004-12-22
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 0071709134

Whether electronics is a hobby or an avocation, this resource covers everything you need to know to create a personal electronic workbench. The author includes essential yet difficult to find information such as whether to buy or build test equipment, how to solder, how to make circuit boards, how to troubleshoot, how to test components and systems, and how to build your own test equipment. Building on a budget Sources for equipment

Build Your Own Low-cost Signal Generator

Build Your Own Low-cost Signal Generator
Author: Delton T. Horn
Publisher: TAB/Electronics
Total Pages: 276
Release: 1994-01-01
Genre: House & Home
ISBN: 9780070304291

This intermediate-level guide to generating electronic signals and building an inexpensive signal generator contains complete circuits, parts lists, and helpful illustrations to guide the reader.

Make: Volume 89

Make: Volume 89
Author: Dale Dougherty
Publisher: Maker Media, Inc.
Total Pages: 132
Release: 2024-05-07
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 1680458418

As technology (seemingly) marches ever forward, makers are thirsty to get their hands on the latest gadgets and gear. But you don’t always need “new” to have fun. Whether it’s rosy nostalgia or a healthy respect for what engineers of old (or the late 1900s as the kids say) were able to achieve with limited resources, there’s whole megabytes to love and learn about the technology of yesterday. In this retro-themed issue of Make: we show you how to play your favorite old-school video games by building your own DIY arcade game, from a full-size cabinet to a tiny programmable microcade. Next, 35 years later the Nintendo Game Boy is still going strong! Cat Graffam tells how she and many others fell in love with the Game Boy Camera and developed a playable art gallery to showcase photos from the community, while Nikola Whallon walks through adding the Pro-Sound Mod to your Game Boy to add more professional sound to your chiptune jams. Then, 18-year-old Daniel Bunting talks about his process for cutting custom small-batch records using polycarbonate discs. Brian Johnson reports on the serendipitous discovery of a cache of 1980s era hardware that jump-started a community around the long defunct NABU computer system. And finally, read a love letter to PC sound cards, and how maker Ian Scott has worked to recreate the unique “tracker” sound with a Raspberry Pi Pico. Plus, 45+ projects including: Build or 3D print a camera lucida that lets you draw accurately by tracing real life Install a microcontroller-powered scale on your espresso machine to pull the perfect shot every time Track your furry, four-legged friends using GPS and your own LoRa network Add polyphonic sound to your projects the easy way with WVR, a no-code, Wi-Fi audio board Make a thermal printing photo booth robot out of a vintage TLR camera Columnist Charles Platt pays tribute after the recent passing of seminal author Don Lancaster, who explained the mysteries of logic chips for generations of DIY hobbyists Pro tips for making the most of your laser projects with LightBurn software Build fun, simple stomp rockets using PVC pipe and soda bottles And more!

Build Your Own Transistor Radios

Build Your Own Transistor Radios
Author: Ronald Quan
Publisher: McGraw Hill Professional
Total Pages: 492
Release: 2012-11-22
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 0071799710

A DIY guide to designing and building transistor radios Create sophisticated transistor radios that are inexpensive yet highly efficient. Build Your Own Transistor Radios: A Hobbyist’s Guide to High-Performance and Low-Powered Radio Circuits offers complete projects with detailed schematics and insights on how the radios were designed. Learn how to choose components, construct the different types of radios, and troubleshoot your work. Digging deeper, this practical resource shows you how to engineer innovative devices by experimenting with and radically improving existing designs. Build Your Own Transistor Radios covers: Calibration tools and test generators TRF, regenerative, and reflex radios Basic and advanced superheterodyne radios Coil-less and software-defined radios Transistor and differential-pair oscillators Filter and amplifier design techniques Sampling theory and sampling mixers In-phase, quadrature, and AM broadcast signals Resonant, detector, and AVC circuits Image rejection and noise analysis methods This is the perfect guide for electronics hobbyists and students who want to delve deeper into the topic of radio. Make Great Stuff! TAB, an imprint of McGraw-Hill Professional, is a leading publisher of DIY technology books for makers, hackers, and electronics hobbyists.