Get started in Electronics book for 14 year old

Getting Started in Electronics -- by Forrest M. Mims III

Available at many libraries, also amazon.com

Good luck Chris

Reply to
Chris
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Hi Dad, The book that Chris recommends is a good one, there are many good ones available. Rather than suggest a book let me suggest the internet. For free there is a wealth of information and many tutorials some with animations that books can't provide. There is also the advantage of getting the material from many points of view. That doesn't mean don't get a book. Here is a start:

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Good Luck, Tom

Reply to
Tom Biasi

Books are great - I cut my teeth on "The Radio Amateur's Handbook" - but get him something he can get his hands on.

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Reading can be a little dry - but when he slaps a transistor, a couple of caps and resistors, and maybe a coil, all onto a breadboard, and it makes noise, there's nothing to compare to the learning experience.

Cheers! Rich

Reply to
Rich Grise

Hi

Can anybody recommend a good "Get Started In Electronics" book set at a level suitable for an intelligent 14 year old boy.

My lad would like to learn electricty and electronics and I have enough knowlege from my university days to help him with it. Can anyone recommend a book which would provide a bit of a framework to learn from. The book should be set at his level, fun to read and should would have some projects he could complete. He will just loose interest in a purely theoretical book.

He is good with basic math (algebra etc but no calculus). Although he has had very little exposure to things electric I doubt Ohms law etc will mystify him for long. A particular interest is robotics so if the book was a bit oriented that way it would be a bonus.

Kind regards ElectronDad

Reply to
ElectronDad

I heartily second that motion. That's the book that got me started, at about the same age, too. Radio Shack may still carry it. Very little math, lots of easy-to-understand diagrams that make you want to put all those projects together. What's more, EVERY CIRCUIT WORKS. This is different from electronics books published by TAB, who couldn't publish a schematic diagram without an error in it if their lives depended on it.

Forrest Mims has written many electronics books in a similar format, and you won't go wrong with any of them. Check your local library.

Matt J. McCullar, KJ5BA Arlington, TX

Reply to
Matt J. McCullar

I am a 14 year old electronics hobbiest and enjoying the book "Tab electronics guide to understanding Electricity and Electronics second edition" by Randy Slone. There's a bit of math to get lost in and alot of technical vocabulary that the book explains but can get hard to remember but I'm loving it. I'm learning all of the different electronic principles, equations, component functions and designs, and circuit designs. The chapter about transistors gets a little boring and lengthy but taught me everything I need to know about transistor, (even if I have to refer to it everyonce in a while). Right in the begining it taught me what equiptment I would need. after reading the first two chapters my dad took me to an electronics store were I walked in, book in hand, and bought everything I needed for under 20 dollars and haven't needed to replace any of it yet. I also quickly learned about salvageing and what a reasonable price for different components is. The chapter about salvageing told what I should and shouldn't keep, and if your son is anything like me, you will praise that chapter when you see the amount of cluter that he realizes is just taking up space and makes it out to the trash. I still need to finish reading this book but the rest of the information sounds pretty interesting. Enjoy!

Reply to
ngdbud

Hi ElectronDad

I found some very good books on electronics a couple of years ago:

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As a hamradio-enthusiast these 6 books gave me a thorough understanding of electronics - I still enjoy looking up special topics - they have mainly been written by a teacher in electronics. Each one of the books starts at 'pont zero' - it should be possible for Your son to get a good start into electronics. There are a lot of books on the market written by people who can't explain the simplest things in a way for people to understand. If You help out with some of the math used i guess You might find them useful. One of the books is about experiments - theory and experiments is the best way to learn/understand electronics. They are all for free download - some the files are huge - a DSL-connection might come in handy.

Kind regards Rolf/Denmark

"ElectronDad" skrev i en meddelelse news: snipped-for-privacy@4ax.com...

Reply to
Rolf Kleppe

I heartily agree with all the comments about doing experiments. I remember getting a couple of 'radio kits' back in the early 60s (when I was still well under the age of 10) which actually gave me an incentive to dig deeper into mathematics and physics, beyond my natural inclinations and even overcoming the boring teachers we had at the time ;)

During the time I was teaching electronics (to ONC/OND level), the practical experiments were where my students really learned the subject (although the theory behind the experiments was necessary of course).

That said, there's a point beyond which you'll need to understand at least some of the underlying physics and a decent grasp of mathematics. My favourite location for those materials are the various vendors who publish papers on their chosen speciality (to showcase their latest and greatest of course, but with the side benefit of a pretty good overview of the subject). Then there are resources at various educational sites (MIT comes to mind).

If you want to find out just who is in the business of making parts, then even though Google is the search of choice if you know what you are looking for, I have found the semiconductor subway

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to be a useful resource if you want to find out who makes stuff.

I have never found a similar map for passives, though.

As for books, there are a lot of them out there but (speaking as someone who has reviewed such books) a lot of them are filled with non-intuitive details, and sometimes outright blatant errors. The ones listed above seem pretty good, though.

Good luck - let us know how your son gets on.

Cheers

PeteS

Reply to
PeteS

Go to your local Radio Shack (Tandy) store and get the "200 in 1" type electronics learning kit. You can't beat these, they will keep him interested for months before he can move out on his own using breadboards and PCBs etc These kits start out by building simple circuits "by the numbers" and then gradually encourage experimentation and then add the theory. They use spring loaded terminals too, much better than breadboards or soldering for beginners.

Forget any book or kit that starts out with the theory, most kids will bore very quickly. But if they build stuff and flash some LEDs and make some noise, it's very addictive.

Dave :)

Reply to
David L. Jones

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