It starts from the very basics and builds up to quite complex circuits and their workings. It's an all-round great website, too.
Still somewhat surprising to me, this kind of simulation actually does help. It turns out that you actually do pick up a lot of intuitive feel that can serve well in an industrial context. I guess no matter how much theory you study on, it's still really insightful to just blow up some circuits. ;-)
Note that Electrical age currently works with older versions of minecraft (1.7) , though a rewrite is in the works.
My biggest issue is how to depict this in a format that I can share over Skype without putting in 80 hours of work. I might go with a series of pencil drawings and scan them in.
Are any of the suggested materials particularly suitable for this kind of presentation? This is intended to be a 20 minute or so presentation so I'm really just providing highlights. Points I want to get across include:
- Resistance anywhere in the circuit will cause problems. (e.g. bad ground connection.)
- Bad starting can be the result of a insufficient battery charge.
- Bad starting can be the result of high battery internal resistance.
- Bad starting can be the result of high resistance in the circuit.
- Operating with loads (e.g auxiliary lights and heated vest) that draw slightly more power than the charging system delivers can work for hours until the battery is discharged and the charging system no longer supports the loads. (DAMHIK!)
Thanks!
edit:formatting
[0]: https://www.khanacademy.org/science/physics/electric-charge-...
[1]: https://www.khanacademy.org/science/physics/circuits-topic
[2]: https://www.khanacademy.org/science/electrical-engineering
The difference is like being physicist and mechanic. Do you want to be physicist and understand electricity as a phenomena or do you want to be an engineer and use it for something useful. Believe me, there is less overlap than you think.
One good resource I have found is series of articles on http://amasci.com/ele-edu.html which mixes a little bit of both worlds.
Have fun!
How comfortable are you with "lies for children" oversimplifications of things that are extremely complicated but mostly irrelevant except in edge cases? (This phrase sounds perjorative but isn't, most of the time you don't need the complicated version and it actively impairs understanding what's going on. But it can be the only way to properly answer some questions like "what is electricity?")
I've occasionally considered writing my own, based on answering questions at electronics stackexchange, e.g. https://electronics.stackexchange.com/questions/245610/is-vo... / https://electronics.stackexchange.com/questions/272694/how-d... ; probably I would target explaining how the electron is a big source of "lies to children", and mostly an irrelevant distraction for beginner/intermediate work.
If you want a large book, The Art Of Electronics is the undisputed classic.
Articles on Electricity http://amasci.com/ele-edu.html
Great essays on understanding electricity, current, voltage, capacitors, transistors, batteries, static electricity etc etc, and popular misconceptions.
[0] https://m.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLyQSN7X0ro2314mKyUiOILa...
Just another resource that may help! You'll have no shortage of perspectives and approaches from the links here.
All of the water analogies were unhelpful for me. I did better just doing the math and seeing the result.
Someone else mentioned MITx. I did that and it was revolutionary. I also have a pretty good book called Practical Electronics for Inventors.
= For straight up electric concepts, I’d look at the Georgia Institute of Technology stuff on Coursera. “Introduction to Engineering Mechanics” and “Linear Circuits 1” were helpful.
They've moved everything around since I did it, but I think this is the one: https://courses.edx.org/courses/course-v1:MITx+6.002x_6x+1T2...
[Letters of a Radio-Engineer to His Son (1922)]((https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23358380)). It explains electricity without any technical jargon. Pretty nice first read. His atomic model is outdated, but that doesn't seem to interfere with anything. After reading the first initial letters, you might have a greater motivation to dive into more complicated texts.
My problem with learning electronics, and, to a lesser extent, electricity, was that most of the guides gave an 'ad-hoc' approach, giving "rules of thumb", recipes, etc. without really going into the reasons for it. They would start off with an (imo) overly technical explanation of quantum effects, then jump the more fundamental Ohm's law, etc., then jump into all the tips-n-tricks of circuit design.
For me, the two major factors to learning electronics were getting enough math sophistication that I could do calculus and linear algebra and being able to program (microcontrollers). The calculus and linear algebra gives tools for the 'passive' analysis and once you realize that most 'practical' electronics nowadays are basically routing power and signal, being able to program is the "meat" of it.
After understanding how to do passive steady-state circuit analysis, I briefly looked at how to do non-passive simulation (transistors, etc.) just to see how it was done (aka, learned how SPICE et. all do it).
Anyway, I found the "Practical Electronics for Inventors" book to be one of the few books that was practical from the outset and actually went into the theory, even if only briefly, without assuming I would get frightened by complex numbers.
There's obviously a path that doesn't involve calculus, linear algebra and programming, because people do it and have been doing it for many years, but these were the tools that helped me understand.
I would also recommend not doing this in the abstract. Arduino's [1] are, in my opinion, one of the better places to start. You can get an LED blinking within 5 minutes of onboxing. Adafruit [2] has many tutorial but they're more focused on using pre-built modules and I guess programming, to a lesser extent, than underlying theory.
[0] https://www.amazon.com/Practical-Electronics-Inventors-Fourt...
https://www.bournetoinvent.com/projects/7-SC-Torch/pages/1_L...
(please excuse the crappy JS)
On another note, I would avoid the water in pipes analogy, as it fails pretty quickly. Electricity is hard to understand because you can't see its effects clearly, but at the end of the day it is caused by an electromagnetic field. Other fields such as gravitational fields, we tend to have a much more intuitive understanding of. Look for explanations that draw parallels between gravitational fields and electromagnetic fields.
Take a look and let me know what you think.
If you get to wanting to experiment with faster circuits, you can ditch breadboards and their parasitics for Manhattan style construction[1] and be able to build _much_ faster circuits with better success. Or you can fall down another rabbit hole, learning how to design your own PCBs. With PCB services becoming mainstream nowadays, you can learn a tool such as KiCad (free software) and send out your gerbers to be manufactured for cheap.
[1]: http://www.sdmakersguild.org/the-art-of-manhattan-style-circ...
I knew nothing before starting the book and knew enough by about halfway through to start pursuing my own projects.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.everycircu...
What actually got me there was the book „Code“ by Charles Petzold[2] which traces the development from early circuitry like light bulbs and telegraph wires to modern digital logic. I found that after being introduced to these concepts, learning about the fundamental physics was much more accessible since it was framed in the context of contemporary application.
1: https://youtu.be/LnzuMJLZRdU
2: https://www.amazon.com/Code-Language-Computer-Hardware-Softw...
don't forget googles and gloves
https://www.udemy.com/course/analog-electronics-robotics-lea...
It's from the developer of AFL and the Guerilla Guide to CNC. Check out the root domain for lots more interesting stuff.
Guess I should add that it covers the basics of electricity and the basics of electronics.
Or a shorter alternative: https://www.ucsusa.org/resources/how-electricity-grid-works
https://www.amazon.com/Electricity-One-Seven-Harry-Mileaf/dp...
https://www.amazon.com/Code-Language-Computer-Hardware-Softw...
If you want to try and learn some basics, and then try apply them, both AoE (mentioned already by pjc50) and "Practical Electronics for Inventors" are good choices.
The latter is much more affordable than AoE.
Still tricky to apply it to AC though.
You can still find them on ebay, or similar kits if you look around.
It sometimes helps me understand better if I get some context on things, how people were thinking before it was discovered, what kinds of hyptothesis and experiments led to another and such.
1 watt = 1 volt times 1 amp. So a watt is a volt-amp.
Similarly to how 1 joule is a newton-meter per second.
When you work with units of measure symbolically in this way, you don't need to worry about not having an intuitive grasp of a joule or a newton.
https://www.amazon.com/Manga-Guide-Electricity-Kazuhiro-Fuji...
The whole Manga Guide to X series is great.
https://www.build-electronic-circuits.com/category/basic-ele...
His mailing list is high quality but also high volume
[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rtlJoXxlSFE&list=PLyQSN7X0ro...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NUUeGianTKM
Its sn excellent 3 hour documentary on how electricity was discovered.
These are important questions.
Great resource, which dispels a lot of myths and misused terminology in many other traditional explanations. Fun read!
For example I did a search for ohm's law class 11 and that search finds pages of introductory videos on that topic.
I'd love something like shenzhen io but with more emphasis on circuits than signals
YouTube guy. Funny and does electronics basics.
This is a seriously good course. I've been interested in electronics on and off since I was a kid. I tried learning from various Radio Shack books, but never got very far. I tried some introductory classes at Caltech, and never got very far. Tried "The Art of Electronics" and it just didn't work.
That MITx course worked.
That said, it does get fairly mathematical...circuits involving inductance and capacitance are going to be analyzed using differential equations so if you have never had any exposure to such things it could be rough going.
If you've been through college calculus you should be fine, even if (like me) you've forgotten most of it. They have some refresher material that should bring enough back to get through it.
Here's what you learn in part 1:
• How to design and analyze circuits using the node method, superposition, and the Thevenin method
• How to employ lumped circuit models and abstraction to simplify circuit analysis
• How to use intuition to solve circuits
• Construction of simple digital gates using MOSFET transistors
• Measurement of circuit variables using tools such as virtual oscilloscopes, virtual multimeters, and virtual signal generators
Part 2 teaches:
• How to build amplifiers using MOSFETs
• How to use intuition to describe the approximate time and frequency behavior of first-order circuits containing energy storage elements like capacitors and inductors
• The relationship between the mathematical representation of first-order circuit behavior and corresponding real-life effects
• How to improve the speed of digital circuits
• Measurement of circuit variables using tools such as virtual oscilloscopes, virtual multimeters, and virtual signal generators
• How to compare the measurements with the behavior predicted by mathematical models and explain the discrepancies
Part 3:
• How to construct and analyze filters using capacitors and inductors
• How to use intuition to describe the approximate time and frequency behavior of second-order circuits containing energy storage elements (capacitors and inductors)
• The relationship between the mathematical representation of first-order circuit behavior and corresponding real-life effects
• Circuits applications using op-amps
• Measurement of circuit variables using tools such as virtual oscilloscopes, virtual multimeters, and virtual signal generators
• How to compare the measurements with the behavior predicted by mathematical models and explain the discrepancies
The first course is 4 weeks:
Week 1: From physics to electrical engineering; lumped abstraction, KVL, KCL, intuitive simplification techniques, nodal analysis
Week 2: Linearity, superposition, Thevenin & Norton methods, digital abstraction, digital logic, combinational gates
Week 3: MOSFET switch, MOSFET switch models, nonlinear resistors, nonlinear networks
Week 4: Small signal analysis, small signal circuit model, dependent sources
The second course is also 4 weeks:
Week 1: Amplifiers, MOSFET large signal analysis, MOSFET small signal analysis
Week 2: Capacitors, first-order RC circuits
Week 3: Inductors, first-order step response, first-order circuit analysis, impulses, digital circuit speed
Week 4: Impulse, step, ramp superposition, digital memory, state, ZIR, ZSR
The third is 6 weeks:
Week 1: Second-order circuits, damping in second-order systems
Week 2: Sinusoidal steady state analysis, frequency response, frequency response plots, impedance methods
Week 3: Filters, quality factor, time and frequency domain responses
Week 4: Op-amp abstraction, negative feedback, Op-amp amplifiers, Op-amp filters and other circuits
Week 5: Stability, positive feedback, oscillators, energy and power
Week 6: CMOS digital logic, breaking, the abstraction barrier
[1] https://www.edx.org/course/circuits-and-electronics-1-basic-...
[2] https://www.edx.org/course/circuits-and-electronics-2-amplif...
[3] https://www.edx.org/course/circuits-and-electronics-3-applic...
For really basic things: maxewels equations, ohms law, and the idea that in a closed system potential and kinetic energy are constant. Just grab a university level physics book.
V=IR (ohms law) gives you most of what you need for DC circuits. Remember that power is volts x amps so you can exchange one for the other (for free in an ideal world.)
Alternatively if you want a practical understanding here’s what I learned from as a kid: forest mim’s book (it’s wrong in some ways but it works) the art of electronics (this has anything you could want to know and is well organized and written, like an O’Reilly book for electronics in general) and this really old book I found in a used book store titled “introduction to pulse circuits.”