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I built every 555 circuit in the Forrest Mims Engineer's Mini Notebook - Part 1

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AnotherMaker

AnotherMaker

Ай бұрын

Thanks to PCBWay.com for sponsoring this video. Interested in getting these PCBs, you can buy them at my shared project.
www.pcbway.com/project/sharep...
The book is available in a new format at amzn.to/4cZtYgy
or you can by Mr. Mims' Memoir, Maverick Scientist: My Adventures as an Amateur Scientist at amzn.to/3WeabD5

Пікірлер: 271
@alfabsc
@alfabsc Ай бұрын
I had a book called 555 Cookbook. That book, and a bunch of CMOS chips set me up for a career. No PCB or breadboard, I wire wrapped everything. Personal computers were coming out (late 70s) and I started writing code. That PC got me a job writing a custom accounting program. Fast forward 40 years and I retired as an IT manager. Thanks for reminding me of where it started.
@imnhtp2006
@imnhtp2006 Ай бұрын
Ditto, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don_Lancaster
@stringlarson1247
@stringlarson1247 Ай бұрын
Yep. I have this little space between my front teeth that is perfect for stripping those small wires.
@alfabsc
@alfabsc Ай бұрын
@@stringlarson1247 🤣🤣
@sandasturner9529
@sandasturner9529 20 күн бұрын
Wonderful success story
@asdfasdf8198
@asdfasdf8198 5 күн бұрын
always interesting to hear how the story of a retired engineer started. I'm 26 and the internet has been around for basically my whole life that i forget you guys had it very differently.
@bobahnjr
@bobahnjr Ай бұрын
You Sir, have described my early days of electronics ! Forrest Mims is a name , when you mentioned it , brought such a flow of nostalgia to me . However, I am now retired from the electronics industry, (72 years old), and I remember those books from much earlier ( late 60's). I later went on to work for Radio Shack after a tour in the Air Force as a repair tech. ( in the service as well as Radio Shack )Thanks for the tour down memory lane !!! Sincerely, BOB AHN 😄
@BillAnt
@BillAnt Ай бұрын
OMG I still have most of these notebooks from the 80's, got me started building little circuits, and later computers. :) Radio-Shack was my home away from home, lots of fond memories.
@mar-tin702
@mar-tin702 24 күн бұрын
Are you a millionaire? Is it worth it learning this shit while Others are making millions
@anguswetty
@anguswetty 9 күн бұрын
@@mar-tin702you should learn it for the sake of learning it, not just to make money. I’m in college studying CS and soooo many kids only reason for choosing it as their major is “they make a lot of money and I’m good with computers”. Most SWEs are unhappy because they chose a field that seemed profitable instead of a field that they enjoyed. Wealth is built by consistently making correct decisions. It cannot be bought with your time and effort.
@NachosElectric
@NachosElectric 11 күн бұрын
There was one project in one of those books called "The Light Listener". It used a phototransistor to convert light into sound. I built it and it actually worked! I could hear the digital codes coming off of tv remotes, the buzz from fluorescent lights, etc. It was awesome!
@lohikarhu734
@lohikarhu734 Ай бұрын
1976, I built a special reflective sensor, while working as a technician at Kodak; they had an expensive problem with slide film being hacked up when the slide mounts jammed in the track, so that the film being fed from a reel into the slide mounts would jam against the jammed slide mounts, the mounting cycle continued, and the cutter would cut through the middle of a customer picture!! Big "oops"... So, I built a sensor to monitor the slide mount advance through the track, and it would stop the cycle short... Ok, so, I used a 555 timer to monitor the phototransistor output, using the nice comparators and drivers to get to clean signal with adjustable level and hysteresis... 555 to the rescue!
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
haha. That's really fun. To this day when people show off their fancy creations over on hackaday, one of the first comments is usually that they should have used a 555 instead of that fancy microcontroller.
@PatrickHoodDaniel
@PatrickHoodDaniel 4 күн бұрын
I really miss the Radio Shack of the 70s and 80s. I used to set in the back of the store and play with their model 1 TRS-80. I had one at the house, but I still enjoyed the people standing around me watching me program. I love this video and I am a new subscriber! Extremely well explained. The terminals can also be replaced by ones that are spring loaded. Also, variable capacitors and pots could be used, but I'm sure you already though of that. Videos like these should be also children friendly for the way you explain the circuits.
@spasticjackson9578
@spasticjackson9578 Ай бұрын
I had the 150 in 1 kit from RS back in my youth. I can still remember it vividly. The 80's was a fun time to be a kid.
@Alan_AB
@Alan_AB Ай бұрын
I remember these little books the first time that they came around. They were such a brilliant resource along with my monthly copies of Everyday Electronics and Elektor. Thank you for the memories.
@erygion
@erygion Ай бұрын
I've been out of the "lab" for a couple years but have recently started up again with new fiery passion. I've been catching up with your videos and have been learning a bunch, thank you for your time and work.
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
Thank you so much. That means a lot that you would take the time to watch and comment. I appreciate it and hope you're enjoying the hobby. Some other binge-worthy content is PileOfStuff, Gadget Reboot, and Simple Electronics.
@JarheadCrayonEater
@JarheadCrayonEater Ай бұрын
Oh man, you're making a 46 year old feel like a 6 year old again! Which is just what I needed!
@bryankreinhart
@bryankreinhart Ай бұрын
Once upon a time, I, too, had those booklets. I had also purchased many of the Tab books on electronics and circuits. I would collect old TV's, radios, etc to pirate parts from to build my projects. I had learned so much by time I was 18 that I would design my own circuits, such as radios and shortwave receivers, and then build them. I would often wind my own coils and sometimes make my own capacitors. The 70's and 80's were a great time...
@BillAnt
@BillAnt Ай бұрын
Radio-Shack and Walden book in New York (Queens) were some of my favorite hang-out spots after school. At least it kept me out of trouble. hehe
@kdog3908
@kdog3908 16 күн бұрын
I had the RadioShack 100 in 1 kit back in the day. Man, waking up on Christmas morning and finding that bad boy sat under the tree was awesome. One of the best Christmas' ever!
@tripplegracing8276
@tripplegracing8276 Ай бұрын
yes please!!! this is the stuff dreams are made of and inspires
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
Thanks so much! I think I'll keep making them.
@billphillips110
@billphillips110 Ай бұрын
You, Sir, are onto something big here!! I'm a 60 yr old chemical engineer who has recently taken a keen interest in electronics as a hobby. My initial searches for resource material invariably mentioned books by the legend himself, Mr. Mims. So I collected nearly every one of his publications. However, I focused all of my attention on the one book that started it all... "Getting Started In Electronics". BUT, as a newb, my circuits didn't always work out as expected or just left me puzzled. So I once again returned to the Internet but was dismayed to find that no one has taken ANY of the Mim's publications from "book to video"...until I came across your video! For your next video project, please consider doing a video series on the "Getting Started in Electronics" book. I truly believe that it would "light a spark" in young minds to consider a field in electrical engineering!
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
Thank you so much for the kind words. I will definitely check out that other book. I've talked to some other creators and it sounds like their may be some more Mims content coming out.
@JudahCrowe-ej9yl
@JudahCrowe-ej9yl 24 күн бұрын
I had every one of these as a kid. Excellent mini notebook collection Lots of good times
@oo0Spyder0oo
@oo0Spyder0oo 16 күн бұрын
When we used to have a Tandy store I bought a lot of those books, still have the mini notebooks and a couple of larger ones. Loved the way the circuits and text was laid out that way, felt like it was written just for you.
@sky173
@sky173 Ай бұрын
Oh wow. I still have these books also. I was 13 when I got my copies. Great memories. Thanks for sharing,.
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
Thanks so much for watching and commenting!
@noelregnaud
@noelregnaud Күн бұрын
Cheers mate, I have the Archer's series for about 35 years and now I am the lead radio tech on major LNG facility. The were essential and I still have them.
@davidnightingale2260
@davidnightingale2260 Ай бұрын
I have every one of these books. I bought them over 30 years ago. I loved them.
@markae0
@markae0 Ай бұрын
A real magic book to teach you.
@ScottGrammer
@ScottGrammer Ай бұрын
I had most of these books back in the day. Now that I'm old, I have given several of them to my apprentice.
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
That's so awesome. That's kind of my thing...to introduce these to another generation.
@danahoward316
@danahoward316 25 күн бұрын
Nice job on this. Brings back a lot of memories. I have all of the little books but also couldn’t afford to actually build the circuits u til way later in life. But the references always came in handy. Your circuit board idea is excellent to honor these circuits.
@jdhtyler
@jdhtyler Ай бұрын
Many TANKS for doing this. In the UK I still have some of these books. One of my experiment kits was made by Phillips in the 1970s far more complicated than the poor kits for kids today. The transistors were mounted on a 1 inch PCB and held on the circuit card by a clip and spring designed to hold a contact wire. I also have a multi legged chip that produced sound effects. Back in 1992 I made a caving lamp (for emergencies ) 1200lm red LED. My friends laughed and look what happened with LED torches ;-)) In 1983ish in Blackburn Lancashire I remember seeing a blue LED in an electronic shop ;-) they said it was ON but you could not tell it was lit ;-)) all the best
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
haha good memories. Yeah. I remember when blue LEDs weren't a thing. Seemed funny to my young brain. I love that the stuff can be made somewhat understandable. I'm definitely nostalgic for the old project but grateful for the crazy amounts of information we have access to now.
@SunriseLAW
@SunriseLAW Ай бұрын
imho: the LED that started coming out in the mid-1990's is the greatest invention in human history. Prior to that, all was dark.
@MechanicaMenace
@MechanicaMenace Ай бұрын
Re: the "poor kits for kids today." I don't think they're poor, just things have changed so they're different and complex in other ways. Relatively good MCUs are now jellybeans and my youngest niece's latest kit is based around an FPGA... These kits generally have a few projects just using discretes and basic ICs (for example at least one 555 and a few 74 series chips are always involved) so they get to learn the fundamentals but if you showed them how to make a radio out of a few transistors in a lot of places there's nothing they can listen to using it so the "wow" factor of stuff like that is gone. So instead they make their own Bluetooth speaker etc. Ok, yes the wireless side is already made for them but there's still plenty to implement themselves plus they learn some embedded programming. Where the kits really are abysmal nowadays is the instructions though, possibly with the exception of Raspberry Pi stuff but their focus is more the computer side. Luckily though datasheets are much more easily accessible and the internet has lots of kid friendly forums but I that side needs to be fixed.
@alwinleerling
@alwinleerling 29 күн бұрын
I wanted to spend the money I earned from my paper route on a race car set. My mother convinced me to buy one of those Phillips experiment kits instead. It was my start in electronics at age eight. My first PCB layout software (Layo1) ran on DOS, I think it was the mid 80's. Now, at 55, I still tinker with electronics, program micro controllers and recently started FPGA development. All because of a Phillips kit brought by accident.
@jdhtyler
@jdhtyler 29 күн бұрын
​@@alwinleerling the kit I had was on a wood base drilled with holes and the circuit was printed on cards with holes where you pushed up a clip (a bit like a hair pin) and then you put a spring over the top this is how the components were connected trapped by the clip and spring. The two transistors were mounted on a small square of PCB that were held by the same spring and clips. I was interested in electronics but the family business was blacksmithing and welding. When I left school I did an apprenticeship in engineering in 1984 I ordered a "BBC basic" rack mounted commercial computer with cards for measuring voltages and control cards, this was used to build a computerised gas test rig for Thorn EMI instantaneous water heaters. The animated graphics I did using BBC mode 7. We interfaced commercial testing equipment for Gas leakage / flow , platinum resistance thermometers and water and gas flow controlled by compressed air actuated ball valves. We had to solve many problems like making sure the natural gas pressure and flow complied with the standards required. BTW I was not that clever I just had a lot of perseverance. all the best, thanks for nudge to remember what I used to be able to do. I still mess with electronics but nothing serious. My engineering interests are satisfied by working on very old sewing machines.
@pileofstuff
@pileofstuff Ай бұрын
Great job. can't wait for the next instalment of this series.
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
Thank you so much!
@sleeve8651
@sleeve8651 15 күн бұрын
Forrest Mimms ! Certainly a name worth mentioning ! And the way those books were done over what looked to be graph paper, was genius ! But speaking of Radio Shack, one thing you never hear people mention, is where do I take all the, " Lifetime " guaranteed Tubes I have ? You'd have to be an old timer, to get that one ! My how things have changed ! It was really nice during the early days of the Shack, where you could actually buy components, or Stereo's and speakers, even some Ham Radio related gear ! Those were the days !
@josephciaravino4115
@josephciaravino4115 6 күн бұрын
I loved those books! I wish I still had mine! Thank you, so much for sharing this!!🤩 I’d love to see more!
@kshrop2448
@kshrop2448 8 күн бұрын
It would be awesome to see more of these videos. I'm often caught trying to explain how things were done "in the old days".
@metalpachuramon
@metalpachuramon 24 күн бұрын
Thank you for the memories, I have actually one of those booklets on my desk, it belonged to my grandfather but I kept it after he passed away. These books weren't part of my childhood contrary to many here, but I find refreshing that, after studying a whole career, these booklets explain so succinctly many of the circuits that once puzzled me during my student years, definitely a nice view into the world of electronics. Very nice video! Looking forward for the next part
@sodbuster4411
@sodbuster4411 15 күн бұрын
Wow. Brings back memories of my childhood. I'd go to town with my mom just to get an opportunity to visit Radio Shack. It was such a great store on the 1970s. Full respect for what you have done.
@yassinechih7620
@yassinechih7620 7 күн бұрын
I watch you now for years I cannot belive Ur channel does not have millions of views yet I don't know it's the production quality but this is pure quality content this same video with the right level of product it's impossible not to get a million views
@DouglasColgan
@DouglasColgan 27 күн бұрын
Nice video, takes me back! Thanks for the time and effort you dedicated to it!
@MFEeee
@MFEeee 19 күн бұрын
I have all of these books saved up for years. Developed a passion for electronics. I now build robots for fun and will one day make electronics. Thank you!
@howardiko7156
@howardiko7156 Ай бұрын
I used this and other books to launch the classes as a shop teacher. Mid to late 70's. I had the trill to have a printer overhead camera that launched the class to make our own boads.
@twycross3
@twycross3 8 күн бұрын
I use to own that book while I was in college. Loved watching this video!
@Frycat004
@Frycat004 Ай бұрын
I have built a good number of Mr. Mims projects and still use his note's\books for reference. The first H-bridge I built and actually worked was a direct copy of his schematic and listed parts.
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
That's really fun
@suomi35
@suomi35 9 күн бұрын
Man, I had them all! Very cool to see them here again 😎
@zilog357
@zilog357 Ай бұрын
Oh yes, I love those. I bought a few back in the 80's but now I have the whole collection (12 books) in PDF.
@mauricepetit9986
@mauricepetit9986 Ай бұрын
Oh wow!!!! Do you think it would be possible to give me the link for those 12 books pdf!!! It would be so much appreciated!!!! Thank you.
@zilog357
@zilog357 Ай бұрын
​@@mauricepetit9986 KZbin does not allow links :{
@zilog357
@zilog357 Ай бұрын
You know where to look. I cannot say the exact keywords because this reply would be deleted.
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
I link to one book in the description. They're all there.
@GwynDelight
@GwynDelight Ай бұрын
Well done! Thank you for this installment. I, for one, appreciate your work and would enjoy seeing more of these. Peace and Love to ALL!! 😉
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
Thank you so much! I look forward to doing more!
@JanineBrandywine
@JanineBrandywine 23 күн бұрын
Amazing video! I’m a little jealous this video wasn’t available for my fall digital logic class. I still enjoyed the video, I always enjoy refreshing my memory and learning more. Thank you 😊
@robertlowe8843
@robertlowe8843 Ай бұрын
I built many of Forrest Mims II's circuits when I was a kid! I had the engineering notebooks as well as his "Getting Started in Electronics." I graduated to these after the Radio Shack 130-in-1 electronics lab kit. I did not build all of them, but I built quite a few of them. I built up a few of his circuits in permanent form, especially things like his transistor checker.
@sdrc92126
@sdrc92126 Ай бұрын
I was obsessed with my 150-in-1 electronics lab kit I got in the second grade and was always taking it to school to show off projects
@stephenrumer9112
@stephenrumer9112 12 күн бұрын
Wow!I. In my 80s now,but I have all of Forrest Mims books ,still have em,but now I've gotten rid of a ton of stuff,had no money for parts in the day,so I'd get old tvs ,radios electronic stuff from the trash..
@michaelrtreat
@michaelrtreat 27 күн бұрын
Great stuff. I learned electronics from these books. Great to see the books memorialized in PCB’s.
@SilverSergeant
@SilverSergeant 4 күн бұрын
Forrest M Mims.......wow. That brings back a ton of memories....Thanks.
@gluphus
@gluphus 3 күн бұрын
love this collection. something so right about going thru these, engineering paper and pencil... good times
@SunriseLAW
@SunriseLAW Ай бұрын
1:50 "earn literally tens of pennies from this video" 😂😂😂😂🤣🤣
@battlecoder
@battlecoder 28 күн бұрын
Forrest Mims books are a gold mine of clever ideas and reference circuits. But it's exactly as you say, I did spend more time dreaming about building those circuits, that actually building any of them. Those books weren't widely available where I live (outside the states), but I knew someone who had a couple of them, and I photocopied several pages for myself. They were my treasure when I was a kid, and they surely sparked my imagination and my interest in electronics for decades. When I grew up I finally bought a couple of the books from online stores. I love the idea of finally going through the circuits in the book and building them. Would love to do something like that, although I'd probably just build them on breadboard first, and only the coolest, or most useful projects would get a board. Finally, selling pre-made boards is great idea. Perfect for people who own the book and would love to quickly try the circuits. I have no idea why no one thought of that before
@Yonni6502
@Yonni6502 Ай бұрын
OMG! You had the same idea I did, but you actually pulled it off! I'm super impressed! Thank you so much for making this video! The series I wanted to do was the "Transistor Projects" books. I think I have them on my book shelf (ordered from the Ebay), but then didn't actually do anything with making videos (or even really building the projects). This video is AWESOME! I love that you made PCB boards for these projects! I used the 555 book as a reference for circuits that I built while in college in the late 80's. The college didn't teach anything about the 555, but I ended up often needing a little digital oscillator to clock digital circuits (which were discussed at great length). Seriously, love this video. I'm now a new subscriber! Thank you so much!
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
Wow. Thank you so much for the kind words. It took me a year or 2, but I finally did it. I started breadboarding them all but it was kind of hard to show with all the wires all over the place.
@frnno967
@frnno967 Ай бұрын
Great video! Very informative and looks like you'll have a great demand for the PCBs as educational tools.
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker 28 күн бұрын
Thank you. I hope people get as much out of it as I have.
@Rody_le_Cid
@Rody_le_Cid 22 күн бұрын
This is a cool project, hope you continue making the circuits. I still have the books I bought, small breadboard I got with it, and even still have the Armatron from Radio Shack. Now I'm an electrical engineer with a PhD, published in IEEE journals, and I design micro-chips! I would thank Forrest Mims if I could. btw, my local Radio Shack was right next to Pizza Hut where we would also get a pizza, drink from red plastic cups, play video games while waiting and have the parmesan cheese and pepper flakes shakers on the table. The 80s were the best.
@dsherman9438
@dsherman9438 6 күн бұрын
I loved those books and think I still have mine stuffed in some tub somewhere. They were awesome and I pretty much bought mine the way you bought yours. About once a week, depending on cash in hand. After all, sometimes you have to buy components.
@Dad-ij2qy
@Dad-ij2qy Ай бұрын
Good that you corrected your sentence in post-production. Thank you for showing us that four of Mims's 555 circuits work and how. I guess I'd call the "frequency divider" a "pulse counter" since it only triggers on every third pulse of the trigger down-up transition, as shown in Mims's illustration.
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
Haha. It's surprisingly hard to talk and film at the same time :) And I think that's a fair title.
@grolaw
@grolaw 16 күн бұрын
ARRL & the “Pop-Tronics” magazines were my intro - discrete components, tubes, VTVM’s, Heathkits! No “Ick’s” to start my electronics play.. The 555 timer was a fine intro to integrated circuits.
@MattBaker1965
@MattBaker1965 Ай бұрын
Great video dude. I loved these books and learned a shed load from them.
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
Thank you so much!
@til2003
@til2003 6 күн бұрын
Awesome idea. Thank you very much.
@JaredElliott1
@JaredElliott1 23 күн бұрын
I have that book. Bought it when I got into electronics. Love it!
@grandrapids57
@grandrapids57 28 күн бұрын
I had forgotten about those books at Radio Shack: what a treasure they were!
@jp040759
@jp040759 6 күн бұрын
VERY GOOD TOPIC. Great idea with the PC boards. Got the books never built circuits. Over time I have built some if I had a use for them though.
@JohnSmith-gm4fj
@JohnSmith-gm4fj 27 күн бұрын
Very cool! I had those back in the day.
@SoCalRobots
@SoCalRobots 4 күн бұрын
I love these! I built many including my favorite the missing pulse detector circut
@baruchben-david4196
@baruchben-david4196 3 күн бұрын
Forrest Mims! Lots of fond memories...
@DesignedbyWill2084
@DesignedbyWill2084 Ай бұрын
Learned so much from those from middle to high school. Put me onto a good path.
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
That's so good to hear. The guy was a legend.
@RyCorp77
@RyCorp77 Ай бұрын
Good stuff man, would love to see more!
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
Thank you! I'm hoping to release one of these a month. It's 7 boards total and I'm finished making the 4th one now, so I should be able to stay on schedule.
@DancingRain
@DancingRain Ай бұрын
Well, I'm tempted to subscribe just for this series. Wonderful nostalgia!
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
I added a playlist that I'll put these in. My channel is kind of all over the place. Whatever hits me on a given day, but all these boards will be in a playlist if you don't want to sub to everything.
@khawk2012
@khawk2012 14 күн бұрын
No, I did not have enough money when I was a kid bit I do have the full first set and yes I believe I built most of those projects.. it was fun! I still have all the components with me. 555 and 3900 and others. 😊 This video brought back so many memories... thanks
@dereketnyre7156
@dereketnyre7156 21 күн бұрын
I went through many of the Heathkit electronics trainers back in the 80’s. Would be cool to go back through them
@thomasgrellner-or1ti
@thomasgrellner-or1ti Ай бұрын
A kit with one of each would be great. Still have my books too.
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
I think it would be fun. And not super hard to source the components if you're doing it in bulk. A few of the cheap resistor/transistor/capacitor kits would do it.
@thomasgrellner-or1ti
@thomasgrellner-or1ti 29 күн бұрын
@@AnotherMaker I actually just bought a Radio Shack kit off Ebay, no idea where my old one ended up. I think it will be fun to use again.
@jessecollins8539
@jessecollins8539 20 күн бұрын
I heard about you from Simple Electronics Podcast!! Great interview, btw.
@bondjovi4595
@bondjovi4595 19 күн бұрын
Forrest Mims really did a great job writing those books. He was definitely an inspiration to me growing up. But, I'm convinced those designs were simply takin' from other sources. The light sensing circuits don't ever use diodes. Diodes make a greater difference in voltages. In turn, it makes the circuit work better when going from lite to dark, or vise versa.
@JimSky
@JimSky Ай бұрын
Great idea. Keep up the good work - subscribing now.
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
Thank you so much!
@hadibq
@hadibq 18 күн бұрын
wonderful encounter!! Love those books. I still have some from radioshack labs ❤ new sub indeed!
@doktabob328
@doktabob328 4 күн бұрын
I still have my copy. For some reason, hand drawn diagrams make learning easier. Similarly, I find that making diagrams with pencil in a large notepad is the best way to develop a design. Which a few generations are now unaware of. It engages the brain in a particular way. I just drew up a diagram of an ESP32 cluster topology a few days ago. Although it was all in my head, it is so much clearer what must be done if I make a multi-colour diagram. And it is much faster than using computer graphics.
@portblock
@portblock 28 күн бұрын
At first I was skeptical about your efforts, and I apologize to your sir, as you have informed me that you did speak with Forrest, I think your efforts are wonderful. It would be great to see a reprint of this work along with your pcb's - What I like most about his work is it taught me by doing rather than force feed me all the theory that makes no sense... By doing hands on and seeing results, that to me is when a person can relate the theory to it. When I first learned transistors, it was from his work, I only knew little operation of them, but I could make stuff, and when stuff wasnt working right, thats when I dove into theory and learned more about bias etc. At the time, 1976 my great uncle was an engineer for RCA and when he started teach me some tube stuff, I had small foundation to better understand them. - I see so many "makers" who grab 3 modules and say I made a thing, sure cool, but what about the people who make those modules? if we dont keep learning at this level, the we will lose it and who will make future modules because todays people are only connecting devices and dont know how to make devices - ok sorry for rant, I just feel your work here extends Forrest work and has so much more to offer than people realize
@diyelectronicsguy
@diyelectronicsguy 16 күн бұрын
Awesome video
@johnmccue7948
@johnmccue7948 12 күн бұрын
good idea, nice video
@GCKteamKrispy
@GCKteamKrispy 17 күн бұрын
That is sooo cool, I wish I had something like this when I was 14-15. Or even now, they look cool
@phaZed9
@phaZed9 28 күн бұрын
I still have those very same books! The 555 one was crucial!
@thedarksage328
@thedarksage328 12 күн бұрын
You can still find some of these books in pdf format. Great stuff!
@maxvideodrome4215
@maxvideodrome4215 Ай бұрын
I built a few dozen when I was a kid. I liked the Hartley radio transmitter. The hard part for many of the projects that interested me was I didn't have tools to built enclosures and supports for many of the parts other than taping things to the desk/etc. Learned a lot. Didn't learn so much from those spring board things 150-in-1 type of kits.
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
I do want to go back to my spring kits and find out what I can learn from them today. There's a lot more documentation so you never know. I remember that transmitter. Such a cool looking device.
@maxvideodrome4215
@maxvideodrome4215 29 күн бұрын
@@AnotherMaker I was able to get up and down my block hearing it. Then, one day, it de-tuned. I couldn’t find it on my AM/FM radio. Tossed it. Think I used a plastic soda straw to make the coil.
@thegreyfuzz
@thegreyfuzz 29 күн бұрын
Wow, I build all of those projects, dead bug style on perfboard......some 40+ years ago. I still have that 555 book and a few more around here somewhere.
@drescherjm
@drescherjm Ай бұрын
0:08 I remember having a few of these. I always loved when my dad took me to Radio Shack and Olsens across the street.
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
Yeah. Such good memories. I spent a lot of my age 10-16 years in a radio shack.
@xlerb2286
@xlerb2286 15 күн бұрын
Oh my goodness. I'd forgotten about those. I had his original engineer's TTL notebook and a few of the mini notebooks. In the pre-internet days those books were vital. You didn't necessarily build the circuit in isolation but they were great as building blocks within a larger design. I've still got those books - somewhere.
@EliasNPC
@EliasNPC Күн бұрын
Would be awesome if you did more of these
@transmitterguy478
@transmitterguy478 27 күн бұрын
I have all of those books also(I'm 65). I have built some of the circuits and modded them for other uses. Great video. I would buy your circuit boards if you offered them. Thanks.
@onecircuit-as
@onecircuit-as Ай бұрын
Great stuff! 👍😀
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
Thank you!
@jasont659
@jasont659 3 күн бұрын
Haha, I love the idea of making PCB's for them all like that! I have that book from when I was younger lol. I actually have built every circuit in that book and few of the other books. But I did end up buying nice large experiment board for doing all them (haha, still use it for Arduino and such now). Be cool have PCB with a cut out of the pages in a frame (but would have to find another book, not cutting my book up lol). Then of course use battery and have button on the front of the frame or something to run it lol. Ideas!! lol
@ANIXElectronics
@ANIXElectronics Ай бұрын
Great video !
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@mitchellmnr
@mitchellmnr 28 күн бұрын
Something to think about for next iterations :) Have a look at panelization - basically you have cutouts to build a bunch of boards the same way - they would panelize your boards onto a big panel in order to do the printing. But, if you create 'shark bites' between your boards - basically make your little board a panel of the smaller circuits. Add the pwr input on each, but have the central power panel with your jumpers to switch which board you power up. The logic here is it would look/function the same, bar a couple of unsoldered pins on each board. But, if you wanted to actually use a circuit, you can break off that circuit and use it by itself :) So if you did sell kits, you can sell the above and singles (if people wanted specific circuits) But by default they'd get the batch of panels. So say someone wanted to use a specific circuit from their pack, they can break it off and actually use it.
@MarkSpohr
@MarkSpohr Ай бұрын
The 555 is a wonderful chip. I built lots of stuff with these. Most useful was a tachometer for my Vega (yes, I owned a Chevy Vega). Worked great.
@CharlesHess
@CharlesHess Ай бұрын
What a great collection!
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
Thank you!
@lander1591
@lander1591 Ай бұрын
I love it.. I would maybe add some silk screening to show the circuit layout on the PCB better though, also instead of the screw posts I would use maybe pin headers or sockets similar to the Arduino.. also I would look at making some Arduino shields for further experimentation.
@ghostmantagshome-er6pb
@ghostmantagshome-er6pb 13 күн бұрын
What a great idea! I had all of those books and built none of them, but they were all somehow integral to one of my" inventions".
@ghostmantagshome-er6pb
@ghostmantagshome-er6pb 13 күн бұрын
I sub'd
@lightspeedwarrior1024
@lightspeedwarrior1024 Ай бұрын
You sir, have another subscriber.
@daveash9572
@daveash9572 Ай бұрын
I am clearly very like you. I had the exact same experience in the uk equivalent shop, known as Tandy (they sold Radio Shack, Archer and Vellman branded items). Sadly Tandy went bust about 1996, but then a mail order component company known as Maplin branched out into high street shops. These were very similar to tandy, except they generally had a much larger stock of components, but still carried the das blinkenlights toys and gimmicks. I learned so much from these books, especially one about the NE555 and another one about the 741 opamp. Thank you for tickling a part of my brain which hadnt awoken for a few decades!
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
Absolutely! That's so fun. I think another creator I know is coming out with some of the 741 opamp stuff, so that should be fun.
@daveash9572
@daveash9572 Ай бұрын
Oh wow, that would be amazing. Which creator, I'll give them a follow? Keep doing what you're doing.
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
@@daveash9572 Thank you. No pressure on him to actually make the video, but he's worth following any way... Gadget Reboot.
@Sir-Dexter
@Sir-Dexter Ай бұрын
Luv the books ....nice one ...child hood dreams ....
@drumboy02
@drumboy02 Ай бұрын
I have that electronics learning lab! I really love the 2 books it came has really wonderful illustrations
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
I need to do more with it. That may be next on my list :)
@Ceagon
@Ceagon Ай бұрын
I love this idea, this is very cool
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
Thank you. I'm having fun with it.
@MK-ge2mh
@MK-ge2mh Ай бұрын
I’ve got all of those books also. BTW, almost all of those 555 circuits came from the application sheets from the manufacturers.
@NeneRomanovaBGC
@NeneRomanovaBGC Ай бұрын
I still have four of the notebooks from Radio Shack. I love those
@gorak9000
@gorak9000 29 күн бұрын
Usually when you want to have interchangeable parts on a PCB, you'd use an IC socket, and you can just push the components in just like on a breadboard. The "machined" sockets are better than the spring contact sockets, but the spring contact sockets allow for different lead sizes on the components. Less fumbly than screw terminals. Phoenix Contact (and generic clones) also have push-in wire to board connectors, with a little release button you can press with a jeweler's screwdriver
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker 29 күн бұрын
Yup. And I think they're 5.0mm (or at least the ones I saw were) so they'd fit on this PCB. I'm using a ton of them, so trying to keep costs down a bit.
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker 29 күн бұрын
Actually I think they have a second set of feet, so maybe not.
@TheSmokeySky
@TheSmokeySky Ай бұрын
this deserves more views :P nice video
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker Ай бұрын
Thanks for the kind words!
@RoboArc
@RoboArc Ай бұрын
Omg the 90s ❤ 🥰 this was all me and my grandpa did. Omg the learning lab 🥰 core memory unlocked yo
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker 28 күн бұрын
I really want to dig back into that lab. It's been a long time.
@tubeDude48
@tubeDude48 29 күн бұрын
I have them all, and tested many of the circuits. I did, however, found many mistakes, so I have them pretty well marked-up!
@AnotherMaker
@AnotherMaker 29 күн бұрын
I found a few while I was designing them...which I was pretty surprised since it was a later edition. And I think I found one that made its way to a board. If you want to share any notes, I'd always take them!
@tubeDude48
@tubeDude48 29 күн бұрын
@@AnotherMaker - Sorry, can't give them up. I know, I know!
@freedom_aint_free
@freedom_aint_free 2 күн бұрын
To me the psy electronic experience was Operational Amplifiers, when chips with multiples of them came out, you could do anything
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