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Advancing the hobby...

Former Member
Former Member over 12 years ago

I'm thinking of setting aside a portion of my tax return to beef up my electronics hobby resources.

 

I have a workbench, basic test equipment (oscilloscope, multimeter), tools (soldering station), assorted parts (pulls from recycled circuit boards), knowledge of programming, and a passion for tinkering around with microprocessor boards (Arduino, RaspberryPi, etc.), perhaps advancing into DIY robotics.

 

What would be the most effective way to invest $300 into advancing my hobby? I'd like to have as much versatility as I can. I thought of buying a bunch of Shields for my Arduino to tinker with. I even considered getting a Gertboard for my RaspberryPi. Then again, I find it fun to throw together a bunch of TTL 74xx flip-flop chips to make digital dice or something like that. I plan on teaching my son a lot of the concepts of the hobby. That's why I'm leaning toward robotics. But I understand there are many different ways I can approach the hobby.

 

What I don't want to end up doing is buying an expensive item (or expensive collection of items) and finding those items lying around without a significant purpose.

 

It may seem like I'm asking for a lot, but I'm open to (and appreciate) any and all opinions. I can think of a lot of stuff I could buy right now, but the request for an opinion could open up ideas or avenues to pursue which I haven't thought of myself.

 

Thanks,

Jeff

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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 12 years ago +1
    I've made a decision on what I wanted to add to my hobby resources. One commonly overlooked set of items that made my list was "wires." Jumper wires (for breadboarding) and test leads (for signal tracing…
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  • Former Member
    0 Former Member over 12 years ago

    I've made a decision on what I wanted to add to my hobby resources.

     

    One commonly overlooked set of items that made my list was "wires." Jumper wires (for breadboarding) and test leads (for signal tracing/injecting/measuring) topped the list. I realized that I was lacking in a sufficient quantity of such wiring. What good is designing circuits if you can't conveniently connect the parts together!

     

    I also invested in a rework station. Nothing fancy, but it's more than I have right now (a plain soldering station). I want to (any will probably need to) start working with SMD components. Might as well get what I need to work with the stuff now.

     

    I plan on experimenting with old and new technologies, from old 8-bit microprocessor based devices, to newer PIC, AVR, flash based devices, etc. For that, I picked up a universal programmer which is capable of writing data to those items, such as PIC chips, 27xx EPROMS, etc. It'll even allow me to go through drawers full of 74xx chips and test each one for functionality. Should be an easy way for me to weed out the bad ones.

     

    Oh... and I did snag some of my budget to buy something "for me." I like playing flight simulator games, so I decided to buy a flight yoke. image

     

    I thank everybody for their help!

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  • Former Member
    0 Former Member over 12 years ago

    I've made a decision on what I wanted to add to my hobby resources.

     

    One commonly overlooked set of items that made my list was "wires." Jumper wires (for breadboarding) and test leads (for signal tracing/injecting/measuring) topped the list. I realized that I was lacking in a sufficient quantity of such wiring. What good is designing circuits if you can't conveniently connect the parts together!

     

    I also invested in a rework station. Nothing fancy, but it's more than I have right now (a plain soldering station). I want to (any will probably need to) start working with SMD components. Might as well get what I need to work with the stuff now.

     

    I plan on experimenting with old and new technologies, from old 8-bit microprocessor based devices, to newer PIC, AVR, flash based devices, etc. For that, I picked up a universal programmer which is capable of writing data to those items, such as PIC chips, 27xx EPROMS, etc. It'll even allow me to go through drawers full of 74xx chips and test each one for functionality. Should be an easy way for me to weed out the bad ones.

     

    Oh... and I did snag some of my budget to buy something "for me." I like playing flight simulator games, so I decided to buy a flight yoke. image

     

    I thank everybody for their help!

    • Cancel
    • Vote Up +1 Vote Down
    • Sign in to reply
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