- #DIGITAL COMPUTER ELECTRONICS MALVINO EEVBLOG HOW TO#
- #DIGITAL COMPUTER ELECTRONICS MALVINO EEVBLOG SOFTWARE#
- #DIGITAL COMPUTER ELECTRONICS MALVINO EEVBLOG PROFESSIONAL#
#DIGITAL COMPUTER ELECTRONICS MALVINO EEVBLOG HOW TO#
Buy a multimeter and a used analog scope (they go for scraps on e-bay) and learn how to use themĪll these guys John Roberts, Matt Syson, Lotus7, Brian Roth, Tiny, rcrowley, etc.
#DIGITAL COMPUTER ELECTRONICS MALVINO EEVBLOG SOFTWARE#
Get some sort of simulation software like PSpice or Multisim Open equipment to see whats in there, when you feel you have some understanding of electronics (a basic grasp of troubleshooting techniques) give it a go and try to repair something thats not working (hopefully something cheap), youll probably wont fix it or youll make it worse but youll learn a lot on the way. READ EVERY DAY, read schematics, and anything electronics Subscribe to Dave Jones EEVBlog and Mike's electric stuff video blog
#DIGITAL COMPUTER ELECTRONICS MALVINO EEVBLOG PROFESSIONAL#
Stack exchange is the best resource to get concrete fully detailed answers on anything, you can ask the simplest or most difficult question and if you ask it well and behave properly, no one will judge you, its not a forum and there are several very experienced engineers willing to help, and its completely free, yes groupdiy is great too but its not as professional nor as serious as stackexchange, plus, in order to understand audio electronics you need to understand the basics first. If you are not going to college, then get yourself some books (send me a PM if you want some specific recommendations) and if you have any questions then go to Electrical Engineering create and account and ask any electronic related question you may have. Its not like you are alone either, nowadays with the internet you have at your disposal several ways to learn and ask questions to others. It is true that sometimes its easier to have someone around to ask when in doubt, but learning on your own and forcing yourself to find the answer is by far more rewarding and helpful in the long term. However you can read some books and youll learn A LOT, you just need to know which books to read, Im studying EE and let me tell you a teacher is not enough, you need to learn on your own to truly understand and create your own knowledge. In my opinion the best way to lear electronics is like John said, experimentally, and college of course.
Any advice from you guys which i highly respect would be much appreciated. I dont really know what would be the best approach to take especially considering that money IS an issue here. Do you "geeks" have anything to recommend? short courses? specific university's or private institutes (preferably in europe/uk)? online courses? specific books? Without a mentor i feel like this is close to impossible. I'm looking for something relatively cheap, and not over a 1 year course (full time). I've been looking in to electronic engineering courses but cant find something that seems to really suit my requirements. But clearly in order to progress as a sound engineer I must master a few basic concepts of electronics. I don't intend on becoming an electronics "geek" (although i do wish i could) cause my interest in studio/live sound is far bigger. But hey, maybe I had the wrong teachers? Where I'm getting at with this is that I want to change this lack of knowledge. Since a young age I've always been the kid who opened up literally everything i owned, fixing everything, breaking a few (it happens), soldering countless cables, and circuit boards, etc. Ive tried going down the DIY path reading as much as i could online, opening up a few electronics books but nothing seems to really sink in my brain. Due to continuesly encountering problems as such my interest in electronics is increasing. Over these years I found that trouble shooting is about 50% of sound engineering (maybe even more), and I'm sure most of you know that most problems revolve around electronics. Ive been doing live sound at countless gigs for the last 4-5 years and when im not "out" doing sound, Im usually in our small studio recording underground local bands, mixing, experimenting, cleaning, reading, building, etc.