This is an easy-to-use cross reference guide and includes part numbers for the United States, Europe, and the Far East. This book is compiled from manufacturers' data and from the analysis of consumer electronics devices for PHOTOFACT service data, which is relied upon by service technicians worldwide.
This completely updated reference book is a must for every technician's library. With more than 490,000 part numbers, type numbers, and other identifying numbers listed, technicians will have no problem locating the replacement or substitution information they need. The "Semiconductor Cross Reference Book" is four cross references in one, including replacement information for NTE, ECG, Radio Shack, and TCE. It also includes an up-to-date listing of original equipment manufacturers.
Electronic Circuits covers all important aspects and applications of modern analog and digital circuit design. The basics, such as analog and digital circuits, on operational amplifiers, combinatorial and sequential logic and memories, are treated in Part I, while Part II deals with applications. Each chapter offers solutions that enable the reader to understand ready-made circuits or to proceed quickly from an idea to a working circuit, and always illustrated by an example. Analog applications cover such topics as analog computing circuits. The digital sections deal with AD and DA conversion, digital computing circuits, microprocessors and digital filters. This editions contains the basic electronics for mobile communications. The accompanying CD-ROM contains PSPICE software, an analog-circuit-simulation package, plus simulation examples and model libraries related to the book topics.
Includes information about typical sensors, along with a large amount of information about analog sensor circuitry. Amplifier circuits are especially well covered, along with differential amplifiers, analog signal processing circuits and more.
This introduction to circuit design is unusual in several respects. First, it offers not just explanations, but a full course. Each of the twenty-five sessions begins with a discussion of a particular sort of circuit followed by the chance to try it out and see how it actually behaves. Accordingly, students understand the circuit's operation in a way that is deeper and much more satisfying than the manipulation of formulas. Second, it describes circuits that more traditional engineering introductions would postpone: on the third day, we build a radio receiver; on the fifth day, we build an operational amplifier from an array of transistors. The digital half of the course centers on applying microcontrollers, but gives exposure to Verilog, a powerful Hardware Description Language. Third, it proceeds at a rapid pace but requires no prior knowledge of electronics. Students gain intuitive understanding through immersion in good circuit design.