Mims Circuit Scrapbook V.II

Front Cover
Newnes, 2000 - Education - 260 pages

Here it is--a collection of Forrest Mims's classic work from the Modern Electronics magazine! Using commonly available components and remarkable ingenuity, Forrest shows you how to build and experiment with circuits like these: analog comparators; audio synthesizers; data loggers; fiber optic sensors; laser diode devices; MOSFET oscillators; piezoelectronics; power electronics; programmable function generators; pulse generators; radio control systems and much, much, more!



  • Analog comparators
  • Audio synthesizers
  • Data loggers
 

Contents

Rediscovering the Transistor
3
Experimenting with MOSFET Power
10
An Ultrasimple Power MOSFET Timer
17
A DualPolarity FiveVolt Power Supply
32
An LM3905 Ap Note
38
An EasytoUse Universal Active Filter
44
A Fully Adjustable Pulse Generator
50
A Sound Effects Generator
57
FIVE
105
Experimenting with LowCost Fiber
113
Experimenting with Kodaks Disc Camera
147
Part 3Radio Control and Aerial
156
73
158
Sensors and Sensing Systems
165
Homemade PressureSensitive Resistors
172
Piezoelectronics Thermoelectronics
213

1
65
FOUR
73
Visible Light Laser Diodes
80
105
226
Circuit Assembly Tips
243
Copyright

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2000)

Forrest Mims has been an electronics hobbyist since building a one tube radio kit at the age of 11. Following graduation from Texas A&M University in 1966 and service as a photo intelligence office in Vietnam, he worked for three years with high-powered lasers, solid-state instrumentation, and trained monkeys with the Air Force Weapons Laboratory in New Mexico. Since becoming a full-time writer in 1970, he's written several hundred magazine articles and scholarly papers. His articles and columns have appeared in virtually every significant electronics magazine, including Popular Electronics, Radio-Electronics, and Modern Electronics. His articles on other scientific topics have appeared in a wide range of other publications, including National Geographic World, Science Digest, Highlights for Children, and Scientific American. His editorial exploits have included an assignment from the National Enquirer to evaluate the feasibility of eavesdropping on Howard Hughes by laser (it was possible, but Forrest declined to take part) and getting dropped by Scientific American as their "The Amateur Scientist" columnist because he admitted to the magazine's editors that he was a born-again Christian. His book sales total in the millions, and he is likely the most widely-read electronics writer in the world.