Thank you so much, Kevin! Your exploration is fascinating, educational, and you managed to make showing off code interesting. Can't wait for the next episode!
Wow! You are a great teacher. Thank you for sharing all this with us. Very interesting approach using python to talk to the scope. Really looking forward to the next and future episodes. You too stay safe and healthy.
Great stuff so I subbed ! I hope to have the time to go through your back catalogue soon but for the moment I'll just carry on ! Is the curve tracer suitable to use simple x/y on a scope as I have to study the schematic a bit more. Your programing 'kung fu' is scary Lol !.....cheers.
@@andymouse the curve tracer connects to x and y on a scope. I don't like running it that way just because the low-current signal gets pretty noisy and I can filter the data digitally if I get them into a computer. Yeah, the combination of a MSEE and a PhD-CS is pretty powerful. (Why the switch? Stuff I used to do in solder all moved into software.)
Hello Kevin, your videos are very informative. I am designing a multi-stage amplifier to drive a piezoelectric disc, and I am curious if there is any way that I could employ your knowledge and help me iron out some kinks with the circuit. What would be the best way to contact you if you are interested?
@christophernicol6713 I don't have a lot of time (what I don't spend on paid work, I mostly spend on this channel...) but my email is in the channel description. I can maybe have a look, particularly if you're also teaching what you learn!
I’ll send you an email. Also it’s funny that you mentioned that. I’m in the process of making a presentation for it, as it’s one part of a much larger project. I look forward to your response.
Yeah. I was around back then. My undergraduate lab reports often had Polaroids of the scope screen pasted in. If you had the camera bracket for the scope, you could even use a triangle and a pair of dividers to transcribe numbers off the trace. We are living in the good old days, as far as electronics is concerned!
Thank you so much, Kevin! Your exploration is fascinating, educational, and you managed to make showing off code interesting. Can't wait for the next episode!
Wow! You are a great teacher. Thank you for sharing all this with us. Very interesting approach using python to talk to the scope. Really looking forward to the next and future episodes. You too stay safe and healthy.
Great video!
Awesome
Great stuff so I subbed ! I hope to have the time to go through your back catalogue soon but for the moment I'll just carry on ! Is the curve tracer suitable to use simple x/y on a scope as I have to study the schematic a bit more. Your programing 'kung fu' is scary Lol !.....cheers.
@@andymouse the curve tracer connects to x and y on a scope. I don't like running it that way just because the low-current signal gets pretty noisy and I can filter the data digitally if I get them into a computer.
Yeah, the combination of a MSEE and a PhD-CS is pretty powerful. (Why the switch? Stuff I used to do in solder all moved into software.)
Hello Kevin, your videos are very informative. I am designing a multi-stage amplifier to drive a piezoelectric disc, and I am curious if there is any way that I could employ your knowledge and help me iron out some kinks with the circuit. What would be the best way to contact you if you are interested?
@christophernicol6713 I don't have a lot of time (what I don't spend on paid work, I mostly spend on this channel...) but my email is in the channel description. I can maybe have a look, particularly if you're also teaching what you learn!
I’ll send you an email. Also it’s funny that you mentioned that. I’m in the process of making a presentation for it, as it’s one part of a much larger project. I look forward to your response.
That's unfortunately not going to work with my Hitachi V660. Good scope, from 1975, fully analog. :)
Yeah. I was around back then. My undergraduate lab reports often had Polaroids of the scope screen pasted in. If you had the camera bracket for the scope, you could even use a triangle and a pair of dividers to transcribe numbers off the trace. We are living in the good old days, as far as electronics is concerned!