Synopses & Reviews
Learn Practical Electronics From a Skilled Mentor!
"The text is written as if Dr. Bergeron, who is a highly experienced electronics practitioner, is speaking directly to the reader with a point-by-point commentary about each teardown, complete with clear explanations of the operation and function of every component. By the time the product is completely disassembled, the reader understands the design tricks, component selection, and packaging choices that enabled the product to reach the market." -- From the Foreword by Forrest M. Mims III
Amp up your knowledge of electronics by deconstructing common devices and analyzing the revealed components and circuitry. Teardowns: Learn How Electronics Work by Taking Them Apart contains 14 projects that expose the inner workings of household appliances, workbench measuring instruments, and musical equipment. Discover how resistors, capacitors, sensors, transducers, and transistors function in real circuitry. You'll even get details on custom modifications to electric guitar pickups, an effects pedal, and a tube amp. Essential instructions for safely launching your own teardowns are also included in this hands-on guide.
- Learn about sensors and ICs from smoke detectors and motion-activated lights
- Work with the LCD and strain gauge transducers in a digital scale
- Discover how surge protectors, power conditioners, and UPS units function
- Study thermal design techniques in compact fluorescent bulbs
- Analyze the control systems in ultrasonic humidifiers and digital thermometers
- Understand how op amps and power ICs work in a hi-fi stereo amplifier
- Figure out how ultrasonic transducers work in a laser-guided measuring device
- Explore electric guitar pickups, effects pedals, and tube amplifiers
Synopsis
Publisher's Note: Products purchased from Third Party sellers are not guaranteed by the publisher for quality, authenticity, or access to any online entitlements included with the product.
Learn Practical Electronics From a Skilled Mentor
"The text is written as if Dr. Bergeron, who is a highly experienced electronics practitioner, is speaking directly to the reader with a point-by-point commentary about each teardown, complete with clear explanations of the operation and function of every component. By the time the product is completely disassembled, the reader understands the design tricks, component selection, and packaging choices that enabled the product to reach the market." -- From the Foreword by Forrest M. Mims III
Amp up your knowledge of electronics by deconstructing common devices and analyzing the revealed components and circuitry. Teardowns: Learn How Electronics Work by Taking Them Apart contains 14 projects that expose the inner workings of household appliances, workbench measuring instruments, and musical equipment. Discover how resistors, capacitors, sensors, transducers, and transistors function in real circuitry. You'll even get details on custom modifications to electric guitar pickups, an effects pedal, and a tube amp. Essential instructions for safely launching your own teardowns are also included in this hands-on guide.
- Learn about sensors and ICs from smoke detectors and motion-activated lights
- Work with the LCD and strain gauge transducers in a digital scale
- Discover how surge protectors, power conditioners, and UPS units function
- Study thermal design techniques in compact fluorescent bulbs
- Analyze the control systems in ultrasonic humidifiers and digital thermometers
- Understand how op amps and power ICs work in a hi-fi stereo amplifier
- Figure out how ultrasonic transducers work in a laser-guided measuring device
- Explore electric guitar pickups, effects pedals, and tube amplifiers
Make Great Stuff
TAB, an imprint of McGraw-Hill Professional, is a leading publisher of DIY technology books for makers, hackers, and electronics hobbyists.
Synopsis
Learn Practical Electronics From a Skilled Mentor
The text is written as if Dr. Bergeron, who is a highly experienced electronics practitioner, is speaking directly to the reader with a point-by-point commentary about each teardown, complete with clear explanations of the operation and function of every component. By the time the product is completely disassembled, the reader understands the design tricks, component selection, and packaging choices that enabled the product to reach the market. -- From the Foreword by Forrest M. Mims III
Amp up your knowledge of electronics by deconstructing common devices and analyzing the revealed components and circuitry. Teardowns: Learn How Electronics Work by Taking Them Apart contains 14 projects that expose the inner workings of household appliances, workbench measuring instruments, and musical equipment. Discover how resistors, capacitors, sensors, transducers, and transistors function in real circuitry. You'll even get details on custom modifications to electric guitar pickups, an effects pedal, and a tube amp. Essential instructions for safely launching your own teardowns are also included in this hands-on guide. Learn about sensors and ICs from smoke detectors and motion-activated lights Work with the LCD and strain gauge transducers in a digital scale Discover how surge protectors, power conditioners, and UPS units function Study thermal design techniques in compact fluorescent bulbs Analyze the control systems in ultrasonic humidifiers and digital thermometers Understand how op amps and power ICs work in a hi-fi stereo amplifier Figure out how ultrasonic transducers work in a laser-guided measuring device Explore electric guitar pickups, effects pedals, and tube amplifiers
Synopsis
Bergeron presents 14 projects that expose the inner workings of household appliances, workbench measuring instruments, and musical equipment. Readers can discover how resistors, capacitors, sensors, transducers, and transistors function in real circuitry.
About the Author
Bryan Bergeron is editor of Nuts and Volts and Servo magazines and holds an Extra class amateur radio license and a commercial radiotelephone license with Radar endorsement. He has published hundreds of articles in Communications Quarterly, Ham Radio, and QST, served as Technical Advisor to the American Radio Relay League, and wrote more than twenty books. Bergeron teaches in the Health Sciences and Technology Division of Harvard Medical School and MIT. His website is www.bryanbergeron.com.