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An Analog Electronics Companion : Basic Circuit Design for Engineers and Scientists

An Analog Electronics Companion : Basic Circuit Design for Engineers and Scientists

List Price: $120.00
Your Price: $94.55
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Mistargeted book
Review: This book bills itself as a book to introduce non-EEs to analog electronics design. Sadly, the author insists on teaching primarily via mathematics. News to author: mathematics isn't suited to tutorial material. Yes, the formula describing the physics of a capacitor may illustrate the operation of real devices, but it does not tell me what a capacitor is useful for. In my experience, you need that intuitive understanding first, before you understand the gory details. This book is not wrong, per se; I am sure the mathematics and electronics are all quite rigorous. I did learn some things by reading it. But, I wouldn't recommend it to another DIYer in a million years.

If you're a non-EE and want to learn analog electronics, take the $120, spend $75 of it on Horowitz and Hill's _Art of Electronics_, and do something else with the $45 you've saved. In the same number of total pages as in the Hamilton book, AoE will teach you more about analog electronics, it will teach it in a way you can grasp a lot quicker, and the book will be useful for reference later. And, the part of AoE following that will teach you basic digital electronics, which Hamilton doesn't even touch.

If, later, you want more physics or mathematics, there must be better books than this one to build on what AoE gives you. I haven't found that better book yet, but I really regret buying the Hamilton book. I almost threw this book away until I remembered how much I paid for it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great book, misleading blurb
Review: This is an excellent book, which I'm enjoying, but it's nothing like what the blurb says.

It's not an introduction to anything. It's a set of essays on interesting topics that bridge the gap between electronics and physics. The quotes from characters like Heaviside are entertaining; the derivations are clear; and the style is lively and fast-paced. Read it *after* working through something like Horowitz and Hill's The Art of Electronics.


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