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Holistic Guidance - Troubleshooting Analog Circuits (EDN Series for Design Engineers)

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List Price: $54.95
Our Price: $38.47
Your Save: $ 16.48 ( 30% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Newnes
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Paperback Dewey Decimal Number: 621.3815 EAN: 9780750694995 ISBN: 0750694998 Label: Newnes Manufacturer: Newnes Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 217 Publication Date: 1991-06-19 Publisher: Newnes Studio: Newnes
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Editorial Reviews:
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Based on the author's popular series in EDN Magazine, the book contains a wealth of information on debugging and troubleshooting analog circuits. In this book, you'll find advice on using simple equipment to troubleshoot (would you believe an ordinary AM radio?); step-by-step procedures for analog troubleshooting methods; and generous helpings of the author's unique insights, humor, and philosophy on analog circuits.
*Provides proven methods for troubleshooting analog circuits *Accompanying disk contains over 60 pre-built Electronics Workbench circuits
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Very good, awesome fun too Comment: Ok, it's clear Bob Pease is waaay good. And we're fine with that. The book is VERY good, very clear in all the aspects, and in all I am very happy to have it. If you read this, you will find many other books use Bob's advice and circuits. I am learning how to build tube amps, and this book almost only talks in terms of low voltage circuits, but still it's incredibly useful.
Highly recommended if you are to build reliable circuits
Customer Rating:      Summary: You'll learn something from this book Comment: Bob has written a book that only Bob can write. It may seem somewhat anecdotical. But Bob is a legend, he can get away with it. You may or may not like his style, but if you read it, you'll learn something from it.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Oldie but Goodie Comment: This was written some time ago, but all information is still real and true. Bob has a way with making learning fun. He should have been a teacher; in fact he is in this book. How about more bob!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Of some value, but not about troubleshooting Comment: Troubleshooting Analog Circuits takes a device-centric approach. About half of the chapters focus quite specifically on a type of device, and proceed to tell you a few common ways in which that type of device can fail. The other half of the chapters are quite random and don't seem to fit together very well, although they also contain useful information.
The primary theme in this book could be condensed quite simply: Don't assume anything. A recurring theme in the book is "This type of component is usually pretty reliable, but might sometimes be out of tolerance, so don't assume it's correct." Pease reiterates this same theme for resistors, capacitors, test equipment, circuit configurations, and so on. Virtually everything boils down to "x might not work, so if the system it's in doesn't work, x could be the problem".
This, in turn, means the book boils down to little more than a collection of random observations which normally would remain unpublished in some engineer's notebook, but are just valuable enough to make a published book in this case, because Pease has so many decades of experience that his experience is worth a bit more than the standard spurious observation. Even so, this book is in no way a comprehensive guide on how to troubleshoot anything. It really is a collection of thoughts and tips from Pease; it should be called "Bob Pease's Book Of Tips And Tricks".
Pease is also singularly obsessed in his hatred of SPICE. While he's correct that SPICE can't be relied upon for perfectly accurate simulation of anything, it's funny that he rejects its use so strongly in a book whose overwhelming theme is that *EVERYTHING* is unreliable. The accompanying photo of Pease throwing a computer off a roof is, like the rest of the book, amusing but hardly useful. In the end, this book contains a lot of information that *could* be useful, but don't rely on it as any kind of resource on troubleshooting. It has little to do with troubleshooting at all; its main audience is seasoned engineers who can benefit from a fellow engineer's experiences.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Bob Pease is a hoot, he pulls no punches! Great content !!! Comment: This book can be a quick read, but also has examples of problems you may or may not run into. He's written for EDN for years, and I've always enjoyed his style (and the occasional tirade on repairing VW bugs!!!)...
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