Hi again folks! Beginner here and worked my way through Platt's Make: Electronics I and a fair amount of book II. Also built all of the projects in the Mims Digital Logic Workbook 1 & 2. This has taken me the better part of several months as I have to keep going back to basics on much of it (see a previous post!). It is fun to build these but I would like to make something of my own from scratch at some point. Two projects I have considered are a 12 hour digital clock (not a microcontroller based one - right now anyway) and a very basic calculator. I don't have any idea where to start on the calculator as I don't know where to start with memory one but the digital clock seems within reach, maybe..lol. Two questions:
1) First - any other ideas for moving beyond these project books for something from scratch?
2) For the 12 hour digital clock I considered a 555 timer but internet search says 555 it is way too unstable to use for time keeping. So I spent a few hours today reading about crystal oscillators. (at this point I realize I am not clear what the waveform of a crystal oscillator is and I don't have one to test. ) but I think I still need some kind of square wave generator after that, so could I not feed it into a 555? Obviously I don't know if, whatever makes the 555 unstable, would still be unstable with a crystal oscillator in front of it...
Then I need a way to go from whatever frequency the crystal is, like 1MHz to 1Hz and started reading about frequency dividers ). So then I came across a 74S124 TTL VCO (mission creep here) which I think, if I understand correctly, has the oscillator and waveform generator in one package. At that point I need to go into a counter of some sort and feed the led displays at the same time. Am I on the right track here? I am trying not to look at existing builds or schematics already out there but at the same time I sort of don't know I need a hammer to drive nails if I never saw nails before..does that make sense? I will add i am doing this as an exercise and not trying to build a super duper accurate/WWV controlled clock. Is there a better way to go about this than my stumbling approach?
Regards,
Robert Opalko
