1/02/2009

Electronic Circuits



As being an electrical-engineering student, I have a lot to do with the circuits and since I am a sophomore, I take a lesson named Analog Circuit.It has a project so-called TRC-10 and I have mine working reception part(hopefully transmission part by tomorrow). I have had a lot of difficulties while I was working on these components.
As my experience,
Don`t do
1) Short-circuit the components. OPAMPS burn out abruptly I can assure.
2)Overstepping. Be sure but slow.
3)Cold-soldering.(I do not like it one bit)
4)Everything by yourself.Ask for help that is why assistants existence.
5)Answer a lot of questions asked by your peers.It seems to me always ridiculous, while you are spending a lot of time on a subject, they just try to get the knowledge right away. Why is that?
6)The same thing over and over. Einstein says `insanity is doing the same thing over and over,expecting different results.` If something is wrong, just follow the signal up to the part you had difficulty.
7) PANIC. Be slow,sure but confidential. You have a lot of difficulties in the process but the result is satisfying.
8)Forget the turn it off the circuit. You may not die in the circuit but you would have bad memories.
Do
1)Try to learn why you are installing and soldering these components.  Do not be such ignorant that completes the project and knows nothing about it.
2)Use your oscilloscope. I love that instrument, come on it does everything you want to do in the circuit.
3) Use your multimeter`s function of buzzer in order to do prevent cold-soldering.
4)Ask the questions in your mind. It saves the time.
5)Go and see some patterns of procect completed in previous years.
6)Be nice and confidential. You may know nothing about the circuit as I was, but you will learn eventually.
7)Go and get some friends in the same lab, You may need help about the technical staff and you can be organised in the way that they do.
8)Be the last person that leaves and be the first person that enters the labaratory.
9)Read the whole chapter before coming to the lab.


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