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323 lines
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323 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2514
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Title: HPR2514: Electronics Calculator Kit
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2514/hpr2514.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 04:30:25
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---
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This in HPR episode 2,514 entitled Electronics Calculator Kit.
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It is hosted by Enable and is about 33 minutes long and can remain an explicit flag.
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The summary is Enable talks about building another 16 Electronics Calculator Kit.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15, that's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at an honesthost.com.
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Hello, this is Enable and I'm back again with yet another Electronics kit.
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It's got to be a series by now, right?
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Once in a while I'm on some web page and this always becomes like an impulse by thing.
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This one recently I was on Amazon like a few days back and I'm going to brush up on some
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old electrical calculations just to refresh my memory like parallels and resistors
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and parallel and series and amps and all that, just like a refresher.
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And I started wondering, geez I wonder if they make a calculator where you can just press
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a button and do ohms law real quick and stuff like that, so I looked on Amazon and yes
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they do make calculators like this.
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Electronics calculators and it turns out they make calculators for carpenters that figure
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out whatever they got to do in the houses.
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They make these specific calculators but they're $80 each and that's a little bit silly
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and I'm sitting there with my phone in my pocket and I go, there's a calculator on my phone
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and then I go, there must be a scientific calculator for my phone.
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Do square root and stuff, quick app search and yep there it is but still it is nice
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to have like a dedicated calculator and you know just have, it's easier to hit the buttons
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than holding your phone and it gets a little fiddly that way.
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Then I remembered my wife still had a calculator, Texas Instruments that does all the scientific
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things so I just, I grabbed that and I figured out I'll use that a few days after that
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I wondered if they had like a electronics like a workbook, just something that you know
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it'll give you a problem per page and then you figure it out and then you know just,
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so I go back on Amazon and I look and I did find one and I have that book now on the shelf
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I can't, I'm not going to say what book it is or because I haven't even opened it up
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I don't know if it's good or useful so but if it is, I mean that could be a follow up
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HPR I have three books that I have one book, I've had for a while on electronics, the
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art of electronics, I have another one that's pretty good, I'm looking at it now, hang
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on, let me just grab, okay J.M. Hughes it's called Practical Electronics, that's good book
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I recommend that one and then well I'll just mention what this book is but it's this
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other book that I ordered recently, it's Mastering the Art of DC Circuit Theory by Paul
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Rogoli but I can't say if that's this book or it's good or bad because I haven't even
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opened the cover yet but there you go, anyways I forget how I found out about this book
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it might have just been a search somewhere, I go on Amazon, I find the book, I click,
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I add it to the basket, it's only like $16 and I figure oh let me just search around
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maybe every once in a while I do this, let me just search around and see if there's
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new electronics kits, something you know just for fun to build up and I think the algorithm
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of Amazon, new I was looking at calculators and now I'm looking for an electronics kit
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and weirdly enough an electronics calculator pops up a kit, so this is in front of me
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right now, I haven't opened it, I'll tell you why I don't need it but I just thought it
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was neat so maybe it'll be a fun little project, I can't imagine there's too much to assembling
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this because there's not much in modern calculators these days, it's like one single chip
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and then just buttons and a screen that's in a battery, sometimes not even a battery just
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a solar pack but there is like a neat little feature to this one that it will be a neat
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little calculator just to build up and leave here on the bench and but let's open it up
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and I'll see you know how it look this is probably going to be like the build leaning towards
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like a beginner's kit, so we'll see, let me see what's in here, oh actually it has a
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lot more parts than I thought, you got to assemble all the buttons, keep digging in here,
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it's like bags and bags, all right I've seen this type of construction before, it's all like a laser
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cut on plexiglass and then you peel off like paper on either side of the plexiglass, I'm filing
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all these bags right on the floor, that's how we do it here, here's the little screen, oh I've
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seen this style screen before, I think I have some of these and it looks like it has the screen
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drivers right on it, here's the chip, what is this chip, IAP, 1704HPBO55, I'm going to have to look
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that up, then you get all the tactile buttons, button caps, the screws, here's the main PCB,
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okay this doesn't look bad for soldering, and then okay a little coin cell for a battery,
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a header, a few transistors, caps, and here is the neat little thing, these are,
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where are they, instructions, and then this little thing that I thought was neat,
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these are a little piece of paper, you're going to cut these, the numbers out, and the plus and
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the minus and the square root and all that, and it goes underneath these clear caps and they go
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over the tactile buttons, but on the numbers themselves are the resistor numbers, so one is brown,
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two is red, three is orange, four is yellow, five green, on and on and on, so it would just be neat,
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if you're wondering what a resistor is, just look over at these buttons and there's all your color
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chart, I keep a color chart for resistors on a little cork board above the bench here, but I
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printed it on a black and white laser printer, so I just have to like read the color and read the
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number, this one's, it'll just be quicker or more, you know it's more fun, oh that's neat, they give
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you a schematic too, you can see how it's built up, the pinouts of the chips, wonder if this is an
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open source project, anyways, let me uh, I'll pause here, I'll just start building this up,
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and I'll take a few pictures along the way and I'll talk about it after it's built,
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alright, I'm just popping back in for a minute in the middle of this build, the instructions
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are pretty scarce, sparse, and it doesn't say you get a pinheader female in male for the screen,
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and it doesn't say whether to put the male in the board or the male in the screen or vice versa,
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so I'm just going to take a guess and say the boards are going to get the female,
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and if I get it wrong, I'll pull them all out and I'll tell you guys and save you the trouble,
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but so far this is a, I'm gonna say that this is a good beginner's kit, you're not going to be
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doing SMD stuff, you're not going to be doing a thousand components or, you know, exaggerating with
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a house and there's no, I don't think there's any kits with a thousand pieces, uh, but you're not
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going to have like, you know, 40 different types of resistors and you can confuse things and it
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takes you forever to sort it out, so far it's, so far it's been an easy build and, uh, it's going
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to be a while soldering up all these buttons, but I'll see how it goes, alright, back to the soldering
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pen, okay, these buttons are a bit of a trick, I usually use that soldering cradle, I have mentioned
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it before, it's like a blue little stand that you can put the board in and spin it around,
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load the components, spin it and solder them up, but these, I tried putting the tactile buttons in
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and holding with my finger, but what I found is I just, the easiest thing I found is I just loaded
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all the buttons, carefully flipped it onto the table, then you can push down on the whole board
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with your finger, you could probably hear all the buttons clicking right now, just to make sure
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that they're seated and then put the soldering pen and you can use the pen to hold down
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as well and then use your other hand to put the solder on and then just keep going like that,
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otherwise you're going to end up having to either hold all these with your finger or put tape
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over them, which sometimes works for one component, but if you have a whole row, like these are
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foreign or row, sometimes that, you know, the two ends will be held by the tape, but the middle ones
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will bulge out, so I'm finding this easiest, load all the buttons, flip it over, put it on the table,
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and you can just push the whole entire thing down with either your finger or the soldering tip,
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and I'm about a third way through these, so let me keep going.
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All right, I'm back. That was actually a two-day gap there. This usually happens in the HBR
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as I record. I got to the point in the build where it needs batteries and I didn't have any
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of the battery. It says in the instruction here, power supply is two CR 1220 batteries.
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So I went back to Amazon and I ordered CR 1220s and I have them here now, but they look like
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they're not going to fit. They look too small. I also have CR 2032s, which is the ones used for
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motherboard bios, and I have some A76 or LR44s, but those I use in my digital micrometer.
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So let me see if these, it says in the instructions that you use these 1220s, so let's pop one open.
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I'll take a picture and if you look at this picture, you'll be skeptical just like I'd
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am because it looks like these want CR 2032s, which is that one we're all familiar with,
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but the size of an American nickel and they're used on motherboards. I don't know where I put the
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camera now. So on the right there are the CR 1220s that it's calling for. They are
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really tiny and they're really thin. You can see on the board,
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not maybe they'll fit, but this is kind of ridiculous. Let me just try. Well, they do fit, but
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you like lose them inside the socket. They go that far in. I wonder if a, let me just try one of
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these bigger ones. These are about three bolts, right? Yes, I'm talking to myself because you're
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not going to answer me. Yeah, they're all three bolts. So let me see if a,
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yeah, these sockets are for CR 2032s. I don't know why the instructions told me
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to get these really tiny ones. They do fit, but they just, you lose them in there, they get buried.
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All right, let's see if it powers on. So that's on or, oh, I got to put the screen in and I got
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to put the chip in. It's been a couple days, like I said, so I forgot exactly where I was. Where's
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the chip? I think we should strike a deal. Every time I do an HPR, one of you should come over here
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and clean this desk. It's a mess. Where is the, I have no idea where the chip is. Can't go
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further without the chip. It's kind of a needed part. Let's go over here. Oh, it got stuck
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to a plastic bag with electric tape and it was on the floor. Good thing I didn't step on that.
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All right, let me pop this in. We just got to squeeze the legs a bit to get into the sockets.
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I don't know how the pick and place does it. It must squeeze them as well, I'm sure. Oh, I remember
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reading one of the, I'm sorry, I'm doing two things at once. One of the Amazon reviewers saying
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I didn't like that you had to bend the pins. I didn't know what they were talking about. I'm doing
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it right now. I have to bend these pins. It's like the pitch. The socket is not the exact socket
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you need, but I thought that all this is pretty standard. Wow, one of the pins just bent,
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tried to go into the wrong hole and socket. Yeah, this is what that reviewer was
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complaining about or am I need to know. Wow, that could stop the project right there at that pin
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broke. It's just almost sore. It bent again. There's this a different one.
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Okay, there's the top side. Wow, that was pain in the butt. Okay, you guys are worn too,
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so it would probably have been better if I got some needle nose and pre-formed them, but I was
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just trying to use my fingers. As soon as I put the LCD screen in, the LCD screen lit up,
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and I got nothing. All right, so I'll have to do some troubleshooting, which I enjoy because
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oh, now I see possibly, maybe not. No, I think these want the bigger batteries to CR2032s. Okay,
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I'll press pause again and check around and see why this is. Oh, it just went off. Oh, it's on.
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And I have two zeros. And I'm able to input numbers. Oh, there's two, five, three, plus
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I'm just pressing buttons because I don't have any numbers on them yet, so I'm just pressing
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random buttons. Two, five, six, plus four, four, which one will be the equals sign. This one
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is 300. Okay, I think this is working. I think I can put it in the case now.
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I like that the screen lights up. It's backlit. I've been using the, just take another picture there.
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I've been using the, my wife's camera, like the scientific, or not camera calculator,
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that scientific one. I've been using that. I started getting into that book that I told you about
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the mastering DC or whatever it was called. So, but that screen doesn't light up at all. So I'm
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constantly like, you know, picking it up or turning it to a different angle. I wish that one
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had a backlit to it, but this one does have a backlit. I've seen this screen before and it dawned on
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me yesterday that this is the same screen that's in a function generator kit that I built,
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which I don't think I ever talked about. That could be another HPR. I'm,
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there, I'm locking myself into some more. And they're okay, it just did the auto timeout. So if I
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hit this again, okay, I think this is working. And I think it wants the bigger batteries. However,
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I got one big battery on one side and one small battery on the other side. So I suppose it can take
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either, but you're going to have to get, when you want to pull that little battery out of there,
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you're going to have to get some piece of like metal or something, grab it, hook it and pull it out.
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So all right, I'll now, I guess I got to look into how to build this plexiglass case. There's
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like standoffs and stuff, but there is no instructions on how to build the case. So and then
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the other thing that you do is you have to cut out like the one two three four five plus minus
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divide the square root, all that. You have to cut out little pieces of paper and those go into
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clear buttons, those go into blue buttons, those blue buttons snap onto the tactile buttons.
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And then hopefully this all fits in the case and I can come back and let you guys know how it works
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and try and I'll go through some functions trying to square root and or screw as a hero who says
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somebody on, he's a fun guy to watch. He's on YouTube.
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Doc Schuster, I think he is a teacher's physics, but then after his classes he does
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like a five or a ten minute video about what that class was, probably just to help the kids if
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they want to go home and you know review the lesson again. This is neither here nor there, but if
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if you're interested in like science and all this kind of stuff, check him out because he's
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entertaining. He does do a small series on electronics like resistors and parallel,
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resistors and series and stuff like that, so just when I said square root and I thought
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screw, that's how he says it jokingly, it just reminded me of him, so I just thought I'd mention it.
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All right, I'll be back after I figure out this Plexiglass case. I've just started
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playing with the Plexiglass case and I glanced over at the instructions and there's a QR code
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and I wondered what that was and right above that is a URL and it is detailed diagram instruction.
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So I've been trying to go off this Spartan instruction sheet here which I'll go to the whatever
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this URL is and once again I'm doing two different things with peeling the stuff off the Plexiglass.
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I'm going to check out this URL and see how detailed it is and maybe it'll just I've gotten
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the build together just intuitively so far, but this case has a lot of parts and I'm not sure which
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screw there's two packs of screws, black ones and silver ones. So I typed in that URL and I get a warning
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what was it worded say back go back. That this is a risky site and it has bad software on it and I
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ignore the risk and I get a 4.00 and it's in Chinese and this is a reported attack site.
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So get me out of here if this is an attack site. I wouldn't do what I'm doing while I don't use
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windows but I feel a bit safer with Linux. So I clicked forward. Wait, please don't visit this site
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now Google detected heart but all right it's like warning after warning don't go to this site.
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I'll just I'll just back out. I'm sure I can figure this out on my own and if I run into
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anything that's not intuitive or you know it gives me more trouble than it should. I'll mention
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it here in the podcast so you don't have to struggle through it but I'm still this is taking
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longer than the build actually. I'm peeling all this cardboard backing off of this Plexiglass.
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I'll be back when the thing is built. So I'm back again as usually happens with when I try and do
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a podcast there ends up being pauses in it of days or weeks. This one was two weeks so it's been
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up it's been a while but I came back to the project. My wife has signed up to take a jewelry class
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at a local like art center and she goes every Saturday so I thought while she's away it would
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be fun to like try and do a HPR while she's at the while she's at the class and I just have
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idle time. So that's what happened with this kit and that was what I don't know three weeks ago
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but then last weekend she had some type of flu thing so she didn't go to the class anyways she
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just left. I'm recording again I have the calculator I've finished it in the meantime and I can just
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talk a bit about the build and some other things I found along the way. I'm still going to call
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this a beginner's kit for the the soldering if you're going to if you want a kit to solder up
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you're not going to get it you're not going to have any little tiny SMD parts on this you're not
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going to get into fiddly you know soldering up ICs you can do it with just a regular tip that's
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going to come in almost any soldering pen the case build however is very fiddly it's a bunch of
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little tiny screws and a bunch of little tiny nuts and I mean it's nice the way it all fits together
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but screwing it all together gets it was a pain in the butt and I had to do it like two or three times
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because there are standoffs that's the first thing I made a little list because I knew I wouldn't
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I wasn't going to be recording for a few days so here's the four things on my list there are
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standoffs there's tall ones and short ones the first time I built this up I put the tall ones on
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the board with the buttons and I put the short ones on the LCD board and I had that backwards so I
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had to tear it all apart again and put it so I got a picture of that in the show notes just show
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you the different standoffs put the put the how would you say that the shorter yeah they're
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standoffs put the shorter standoffs on the board that goes on the base of the whole calculator kit
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and then put the taller standoffs it's for the LCD screen they are the depth basically of the LCD
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screen let's the LCD LCD screens fit flat on the front face instead of us sunken in or pushing out
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the second thing okay I built it all up I got the standoffs right I start to go populating the
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buttons here's the second thing on my note just I know I well I think I did I'm pretty sure I
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mentioned I don't even know what I recorded weeks ago that I put all the buttons on the board
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and I used electric tape to hold them and I flipped it over and I soldered them up quick don't do
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that it bit me right here I put the whole thing back together I start populating the buttons on
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the calculator and button eight and nine button five and six and button two and three which are all
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grouped in the center we're all leaning a skew because the tape was not supporting them over there
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it's probably best to solder these one at a time and make sure you got that button pushed
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down into the board solder it up because if you have it crooked at all you can't get the buttons in
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if there's a pretty tight tolerance between the the face where the buttons go in and the buttons
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themselves so that's tip number two tip number three I put it all back together I got the buttons
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going the thing only lasted like four minutes and then the battery was dead I took it apart again
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I put the other batteries in again four minutes I think these instructions that came with this kit
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are an old set because like I notice the square root button is different in the instructions and
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it is on the calculator I bet whoever built this
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specked out these what was those little those little batteries you'll probably remember quicker
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than I did because you just heard it about 10 minutes ago oh it says it on the sheet
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CR122 CR122 zero batteries they're pretty tiny I bet you well they would probably fit in a watch
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like a wristwatch and then I remember speculating that they originally spec these out for the CR
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2032s which you'd see on motherboards and anyways I put the whole thing together with what the
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instruction said and it only lasts four minutes those little tiny like watch batteries I don't think
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they can power that light on the LCD for too long so I tore it all back apart I went and got the
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coin cells the CR 2032s and they do fit you push them all the way in and I'm looking now yeah
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they fit fine I think there was probably like a design change because the other batteries weren't
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lasting and they just didn't update these instructions I bet if I could get to that the web page
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where the online instructions are they probably clear all this up but I kept getting that attack page
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thing attack page so I just braved it alone so if you can't get to the new instructions and you
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don't want to brave that attack page I'm trying to help you out here if you buy this kit and
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okay that's it for my notes except for one thing at the very end so usage
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well you press on of course I have it here next to my I have a Texas Instruments TI 36X
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this is the one I use when I'm doing calculations I don't really need all the power of this
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like I never do some of this stuff that you might do and what I'm saying is there's buttons here
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that I never touched but this calculator was only at 25 dollars I use square root a lot I use
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parentheses I like to try and do my calculations as like a one-liner on the computer the calculator
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and anyways after building up this kit I like it it's fun it's a neat kit it's going to be cool
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to leave on the table but when I'm doing calculations I'm still going to be grabbing this Texas Instruments
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I'll tell you why so let's just go through the functions of this thing here you press on you can
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just do you know any 25 times three you get your result you press on it clears it again there's
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back space if you if you put a wrong number and you can hit back that candy the thing that I thought
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was neat when I saw this kit is each of the numbers if you look at a picture there each of the numbers
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has a color band on it and those are the color bands of resistors so one brown two red three
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orange on and on it would it's just neat if if this is on the desk somewhere and I'm I do have
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the resistor chart you think I'd have it memorized by now but I have the resistor chart up on
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a cork board but it's printed in black and white it'll be neat just to look over and what was green
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again five you know just look over at this calculator the other thing you can do is you press on
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you press the mode button and then you can enter a resistor's value that you have in your hand so
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let's say yellow well this is the one in the instructions yellow violet black and brown and then
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you press one of the other buttons which is the multiplication the division those will give
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tolerances so in this case they're saying put in brown for so there it tells you what the
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resistor is 4700 at 5% you can I just turned it off press mode then you can do that was a five
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band resistor if you want to do a four band resistor you press the square root symbol but it's also
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a selection button so you press that and you see the color band ring changes to four and then
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you can put in green red yellow again this is the one in the book here and then you choose your
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tolerance so 5% so I got a 420k resistor at 5% just another neat little function of this another
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thing you can do is calculate the working voltage of LEDs and you can also convert from a decimal
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to hexadecimal with this it does have in regular mode it does have square roots a square root of
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100 is going to be 10 so there that works the thing that's missing on this that I use all the time
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is parentheses brackets so until you want to calculate some resistors in parallel
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let's say you got a I'm just going to pick these numbers for ease of use of four ohm and a five ohm
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so you'd go one over four equals so then you got to write that down 0.25 and then you got to do
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your one over five then you got you got to write that down again 0.2 and then you got to add them
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together so 0.2 you can do this in your head but I'm just doing it on the calculator plus 0.25 equals
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0.45 then you have to do the one over that again so one over four five equals
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0.022 and then they put a plus because they mean the pluses are going to go on but on the Texas
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instruments how I would do that is one over open bracket one over four plus one over five close
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bracket enter you can see how much quicker that was I got I got the answer hang on these answers
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are different ah okay the answers are the same I'm using my Texas instruments in degrees and when
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I put it into engineering I get the same when I put it into engineering mode I get the same result
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as this calculator so they might be given your engineering results which would make sense but
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I tend to use degrees anyways I will miss the brackets on this thing the parentheses so there you
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have it it's a neat kit it's a it's neat that you can look through the plexi glass and see all the
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insides and it's it'll be a neat like conversation piece I will use it you know if if my text
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instruments is in another room I'm sitting here on the bench I will use this the case is fiddly
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like I mentioned every time you want to change the batteries you're going to have to take it apart
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and put it back together I've considered making little slots inside the
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oh yeah here's here's one fiddly bit when you put the LCD screen on you put a screw through
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with all the to the plexi glass through the black front into the clear plexi glass then you have
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to take this little tiny nut and stick it in a slot and then get the screw to go in there and
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all the time I would drop that little nut inside the case it would rattle around I have to pull it out
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I ended up taking some electric tape and wrapping around my finger sticky side out and then putting
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the nut on the tape and then sticking that in the slot and using a screwdriver that worked out
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better but just be warned every time you go to change the batteries you got to take this thing back
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apart but for a $16 kit it's fun go go buy one the last thing on my notes was I know I mentioned
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books at the beginning when I recorded weeks back and one of the books that I mentioned was
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mastering the art of DC theory and I said I couldn't say anything about it because I hadn't even
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cracked open the book that is not the beginner's book this one does not hold your hands it assumes
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prior knowledge so just before warned if if you're gonna investigate any of the books I mentioned
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in the beginning this will give you a problem on one page and go through the solution and then
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you flip the page over and you get the same problem with different values you have to solve that one
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on your own then look in the back of the book and see if you got the answer right I'm enjoying it
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I'm up I'm looking at I'm up on page like 76 now it's good fun if you got some prior knowledge and
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you just want to brush up on some circuit theory and calculations and stuff like that this isn't a
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review of the book I just thought I follow up because I know I mentioned it I suppose I can review
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some of these books maybe when I'm done with this one or a little farther in but anyways this isn't
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a podcast about the books it's about this calculator I'll put some pictures in the show notes
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if you guys want to contact me I've mentioned my email so many times you can find it but
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really I enjoy the the HBR comments section more so I've been using that
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because we just keep the conversation going there okay until next time this is NY Bill signing off
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you've been listening to hecka public radio at hecka public radio dot org we are a community
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podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday today show like all our
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shows was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself if you ever thought of recording a
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podcast then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is hecka public radio was
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founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomican computer club and it's part of the binary
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revolution at binrev.com if you have comments on today's show please email the host directly leave
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a comment on the website or record a follow up episode yourself unless otherwise status today
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show is released on the creative comments attribution share a life 3.0 license
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