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Unread 13-12-2013, 12:21
yash101 yash101 is offline
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Re: Learning Electronics

Yes. I am familiar with Kirchoff's law! E{abs[ups]-abs[downs]}=0, where E means Sum of!
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Unread 13-12-2013, 12:30
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Re: Learning Electronics

Quote:
Originally Posted by yash101 View Post
Yes. I am familiar with Kirchoff's law! E{abs[ups]-abs[downs]}=0, where E means Sum of!
The Kirchhoff's Laws the previous poster is referering to are the circuit laws. They basically say that all of the voltages in a loop must equal zero, and all of the currents at a node must equal zero.

That leads to the mesh-current and node-voltage methods of circuit analysis, which are fundamentals to all circuit design. Highly recommended starting point!
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Unread 13-12-2013, 12:30
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Re: Learning Electronics

Quote:
Originally Posted by yash101 View Post
Yes. I am familiar with Kirchoff's law! E{abs[ups]-abs[downs]}=0, where E means Sum of!
The Kirchhoff's Laws the previous poster is referering to are the circuit laws. They basically say that all of the voltages in a loop must equal zero, and all of the currents at a node must equal zero.

That leads to the mesh-current and node-voltage methods of circuit analysis, which are fundamentals to all circuit design. Highly recommended starting point!
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Unread 16-12-2013, 01:25
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Re: Learning Electronics

Quote:
Originally Posted by jee7s View Post
The Kirchhoff's Laws the previous poster is referering to are the circuit laws. They basically say that all of the voltages in a loop must equal zero, and all of the currents at a node must equal zero.

That leads to the mesh-current and node-voltage methods of circuit analysis, which are fundamentals to all circuit design. Highly recommended starting point!
That made the engineer in me tingle
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Unread 16-12-2013, 08:46
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Re: Learning Electronics

Dev,
As Joe pointed out the ARRL Handbook, even an old copy is a good book to put on your shelf. There should be several at your library. I would check out the ARRL website for other titles, all of them are pretty good. Check for a hamfest in your area. Should be one coming up soon as most areas have a midwinter fest in larger urban areas. You can pick up components for next to nothing. Bring a pack so you carry stuff home. you should be able to find little kits and lot's of books if you just look around. ARRL retailers usually carry their book inventory to the fest.
Check out http://www.arrl.org/shop/Technical/
If you hurry, I think they are still shipping for Christmas. As Don pointed out, digital electronics are a world away from analog circuitry. RF is much different than audio, etc. Start off with basic AC and DC circuits. Learn DC first so that you can see how components function and then move to AC from there. When I went through school, DC was an entire semester and a per-requisite for everything else.
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