Beginner Electronics - 14 - Circuit Design, Build, and Measuring!
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- Опубликовано: 4 июл 2024
- Today we design and build a working circuit, as well as go over how to properly record values using a multimeter!
*DISCLAIMER - READ BEFORE WATCHING*
I am an electronics hobbyist; I do not have a degree in electrical engineering. This series MAY NOT teach all of the appropriate safety required for general electronics work. Any advice taken from this series should be checked with multiple sources, and a professional should be addressed to ensure proper safety.
See my website: codenmore.github.io/
Follow me on Twitter - @CodeNMore - / codenmore
Comment, PM, or Tweet me for help!
Teaching to understand all subjects to the fullest extent! Хобби
**DISCLAIMER - READ BEFORE WATCHING**
I am an electronics hobbyist; I do not have a degree in electrical engineering. This series MAY NOT teach all of the appropriate safety required for general electronics work. Any advice taken from this series should be checked with multiple sources, and a professional should be addressed to ensure proper safety.
As a general precaution that was not pressed in this video in particular: power should be DISCONNECTED when working with electronics components. This is a major safety concern.
NEW HOBBYISTS: DO NOT MAKE CIRCUIT CHANGES WHILE POWER IS CONNECTED TO THE BREADBOARD.
I understand it’s rather late for making comments but I’ll add mine anyway. It’s been more than 45 years since I dabbled with circuits in high school. What jumped out at me was that you were grabbing components (the LED lead) while power was applied to the circuit. Yes these are extremely low currents but I think for safety reasons , New people should be taught safety practices so it is ingrained in them. Thanks
Tyrone Mixx I got ya
@ Tyrone Mixx There are many factors in learning electronics. One plan I discovered which successfully combines these is the Gregs Electro Blog (check it out on google) definately the no.1 info that I have ever heard of. Check out this interesting website.
Gotta admit that I wasn't even thinking about that. Thanks a bunch m8. Safety should always come first.
Not certain about the points made but ,if anyone else wants to discover introduction to electronics try Bablim Electronics Booster (Have a quick look on google cant remember the place now ) ? Ive heard some interesting things about it and my partner got great results with it.
Idk why but your playlist of "trains interesting" cracked me up
Hello there,
Im 40 years old and found a new hobby thanks to you.!. Great videos buddy, thanks
is there any more videos on this subject.?
+Alexander Summers this series is currently ongoing, and will be continued, don't worry!
good man, thanks for your reply. looking forward to them.
+Alexander Summers the greatest results that i've had was with the Gregs Electro Blog (just google it) definately the best course i've followed.
Alexander Summers I'm 46
same, i'm 24 though and if you buy the kits, from all the tutorials he's taught, you can do just damn near all of the the other projects in the booklet that you get with the starter kits
It's a shame these videos are getting hit by some shady ads for that greg blog thing that costs like $40.
This playlist is fantastic.
I have bought my own kit and I am trying out some of these experiments and I am getting successful results.
Please post more of these.
Very informative. This covered everything I learned in a basic electronics class in college.
supernintendochalmers1234 lol i haven’t learned a thing in science class as of 2018 kinda doubt that’ll change anytime soon xD
So far you have done a superb job of instructing and reinforcing the information. I am really enjoying the information and learning from your series.
You explain everything very clearly and effectively. I am thoroughly enjoying your episodes!
More, please! You're an awesome tutor! Thank you for all the effort you've put into these videos!
Me: did I learn more than what I learned in my college :o
Yep
Indeed. hahahaha
You must have gone to the wrong college
What college did you go to the know that the homeless guy teaches inside his cardboard box
Me learning it at 13 and under standing it 😆 and can't find pie
Awesome info! I'm learning a ton, thanks! Especially cool points about improvising in electronics and showing how the DPDT switch actually works on a real switch - very cool! Also great stuff about using a multimeter and how to measure volts & amps.
Thanks for posting these great videos! It's really helping get back to understanding electronics, after being away from it.
Thanks for opening my eyes, this show's so helpful and easy to understand.
great stuff, I can't wait for more videos on the subject.
I'm learning electronics because I want to learn how to repair electronics and this tutorial is teaching me allot in understanding how each components work. best tutorial ever.
Loving the series. Keep it up, you rock!
Youre explanations are very clear and easy to follow. Thanks!
I was thrown into the field at my job on day one without any idea what i was doing or why. following this it very quickly answering the why lol. thanks. I got up to this video today, plan on starting again tomorrow. Going to return to work Monday with a lot more know how in what I am doing, i appreciate you making these videos. i'll be sure to pass on to co workers with the same problems. makes me and im sure a lot of other people wonder how places can hire people and just think they will pick it up as they go without any mistakes. But i have no problem working overtime fixing the mistakes i made cause they didnt teach me right lmao. Anyways i got to the point where i decided to learn from someone the basics first lol. thank you
Yo idk if you use ur yt anymore but brother ur videos are amazing, ur clear and concise when speaking and I learned more from ur videos in a night than 8 weeks of school
Great work....I thank u for providing us with such informative videos.
The multimeter shown can measure microamp. the µ sign is for micro, which is much smaller than milli.
thanks man love u brother thx to u i learnt a lot been searching for a good teacher in electronics for years
Great video and great teaching. Thank you Sir.
I am currently going to UEI and I thank you for explaining this way better then my instructor, so gonna pass my class now.
thank you so much for the new episode!!!!
Great job sir, thank you very much for your dedication.
Very well explanation sir I am a beginner and your videos helps me to understand how a circuit work you gave very good and easy explanation thankyou so much
love this.it's just what i was hoping to find. thank you. I was wondering why the resistor is placed after the l.e.d? for some reason it seem like it would be placed before. Again,, thank you for doing a fantastic job.
You can place the resistor before and after the led (and switch) in this circuit - it doesn't matter, because all electrons move / flow at once.
Great lessons, your videos are easier to understand...
Need to know how to build electronic project from difficult circuit design, will you make the lesson?
Thanks for the great videos, have helped me a ton.
This is such a good video. Nice job
Thank you for this and all your other videos. To measure current, couldn't you have plugged the probes into the breadboard? (Red to the positive power bus, black to the row with the longer leg of the LED?) Or is there a reason for just touching then rather than plugging them in?
I'm learning so much!!
Great tutorial man!
I'm learning new thins Sir. Thank u v much
I don't understand putting the resistor on the backside of the LED. How does that limit the current to the LED?
Because it doesn't matter if the resistor is before or after a component in a circuit. It drops the current in the whole circuit.
Hey, thanks for these videos! I have a question about measuring current. I noticed you touched the probes to the leads. Would it be okay to touch the probes to spots on the bread breadboard instead of would that be less accurate?
You could if you could fit the probes into the small holes
Nice video. Thanks!
good explanation that for current measuring, the meter is a wire ! Thanks a lot.
hey codenmore, first I just want to say I really appreciate you and the vids you make. ive watched all videos up to this point and so far only have had one question how can you tell which end of a resistor to read first using the chart from your website?
Tommy Goodwin i remember i talked about it for like 15 seconds either go back and check or google it
you're doing a gfreat job here , keep going
Hi buddy! Nice video very informative content! Hey I have a doubt? If I need to make a circuit where power source is 12v and 10amps and a load of 12v with 6amps with two fans of 12v 0.18A and 12v 0.08A. Can you tell me if there is a need for other components like resistor and capacitor or anything else to complete the circuit? I am a layman so please share your thoughts.?
Wow very helpful video.. thanks so much!
Thank you so much i am on episode 14 n i hv learn so much from this
Hey man, this are amazing videos! Can't believe the quality is this high back in 2015!
Quick question for you...on your diagram, is it backwards?
I'm messing around with Arduino's and all the schematics show the Power going to resister and then LED...
Your diagram is showing Power to LED to Resister. Do you have it backwards?
After further research, it seems it doesn't matter. As long as you have the resister in there.
What direction would you say current flows, if we are going to use the 'water analogy'. Postive to negative or negative to positive ??
Question: Does the order of the LED and resistor matter in order to protect the LED from "frying"? These videos are great by the way. Thank you.
I have the same question
No - the resistor can go before or after the LED, as no matter what order the resistor still takes some voltage.
Alright i learned something new .. Thank you CodeNMore
I'd have thought that you'd need the resistor before the LED to resist some of the current on the negative side since current flows from that direction. Interesting! Can you tell us why it works on either side CodeNMore? I don't get it.
I'm indeed a new learner, and had the same question, but then I thought of it different way, assuming you have a closed circuit of water pipes, 75% of it is 2" in diameter and 25% as 1/2". The 25% is considered as a bottleneck that reduces the flow regardless of the location, and I believe the resister works as a bottleneck reducing the current flow in the whole circuit regardless of the location also. Hope my understanding is correct.
Please I'm asking question concerning the LED. what's the main purpose of this LED is it indicator or it have series of purpose and if yes please list them
Good and simple
Is there a specific reason why you connected the wire to the negative slot on the power rail?
Thank you for the informative videos, great work. I do have one question/critique. Is it proper to say that a component is "taking up" voltage? That wording throws me off as voltage is not consumed or converted but just a measurement of "pressure" as you stated in an earlier video. Thanks again.
I don't think wording is so relevant as long as you make yourself understood and it doesn't deform the working principles of a thing. If you're living in Europe, you will hear all kinds of wording when things are being explained in English because people tend to focus upon the general knowledge and not necessary upon the formulation (especially when you are not a native, and UK is the only English native country in Europe).
Hi, I have been following along with these videos, but is it possible for you to explain how I put the switch into the breadboard? I see you have wire on yours, but you did not explain how you added them and I do not want to try something and mess up.
ZJ Peterson he i attached the wires to the switch i think soldered but i forgot
I connected same thing but with no switch as i have one in the power module, I measured the v in the led and found it 2.84 but in the resistor is 2.05v, can you please explain why this difference between our readings, i am using 330ohms resistor
wow...nice one sir....
The resister doesn't need to be in between the power source and led?
Doea it mattter if u put the resistor after or before the LED?
Informative video. Ig in the circuit design a small mistake, the resistor should be placed before LED, in order to limit the current flow.
Does a resistor dissipate energy (as heat?) or does the power source just not give as much energy?
Where did you get your 9v battery converters with the solid ends? Mine are a bunch of little one’s that I have to keep twisting together and it’s annoying.
What site would you recommend to purchase electronics components, e.g. resistors, capacitors, switches, etc.?
can I ask what are those terminals are called you attached to the bottom of your switch. I was trying to find them and I got ones that are too big to fit in my breadboard?
you are a best explainer👍
I only had one question. In previous videos, you had the resistor « before » the led to « remove » the extra voltage… in this example you put it « after » and since ( one thing you haven’t mentioned, or maybe you did and I forgot) a diode is unidirectional… wouldn’t it cause the diode to burn out due to the current flow of the voltage? Just trying to get my head around it. Thx… your info in general is great.
In previous schematic diagram ,I saw resistor is connected on anode of LED ,here I can see it is connected to cathode of LED .Does it make any difference?
Hi! I really love your videos and have been watching them all day. I have question,
Back in one of your beginning videos you mentioned that dc current like the battery only flows in one direction. In using the 9v battery, does it flow from the negative or positive side? also does the sequence matter that it flows through the various components? If it flows at about 9v from the battery then hits the resistor and brings it down to about 3 does it remain at 3 for the rest of the circuit?
Have you gotten to the bottom if this yet?
This is 3 years too late but someone else might benefit. I'm extremely ignorant but I think I know enough to answer your question. Electricity flows from negative to positive but that isn't really important right now. Sequence doesn't matter for these components but it may for others, I don't know enough yet. The resistor makes the entire circuit 3ish volts, both before and after itself.
Highest regards from a teacher in Singapore.
I am 11 years old and understand everything thanks to you bro.
would a resistor come before LED on the schematic? since it's direct circuit, power come straight to LED and would need resistant control the flow of electron, right?
Thank you for your lesson.But I have question why are we put resistor in negative side
dude nice tutorial😀 it is very fun
This is methodical cool!
Hello,
Tnx for your video.
Thank You!
can you show examples of your projects on a circuit board as well asa breadboard?
Dude you are awesome!
in 1:34 the resistor is after the led,i think the resistor should be before the led so it can protect the led?
So does it not matter where the resister goes, either before or after the component?
does the order matter? or we place the resistor before the switch and then the LED?
what if we cut the longer length and shorter length of the LED's equally! How do we identify which one's anode or cathode?
Does resistors place matter? If it is on the positive or negative side?
Hi sir... ur videos r vry helpful.. 1 doubt... In DPDT switch, can we use middle one as possitive & left one as negative? Kindly clarify...
Saranya Saranya no
does a spst switch make only one connection if it does is it activated when i turn the switch on?
hi,in episode 12 you show the resistor between the +terminal of the battery going to the led,then in episode 14 you have wired it to the - side of the led through the switch to the neg ,i'm confused to which way is correct,many thanks,Alan
+Alan Burton For this circuit it doesn't matter if the resistor is in front of or behind the LED so long as it is in series which means one after the other. Think of the wire in this circuit as a water pipe and a resistor as a blockage in the pipe. It doesn't matter where you put the blockage it will slow the flow of water in the whole pipe. If in doubt with circuits think of water in a pipe.
Noob question - Would i be correct in saying that the jumper cable and the resister could swap positions, without affecting the behavior of the circuit?
can you have multiple resistors in a row like 200 + 20 + 20 ?
Question about the schematic:
Is there a standard for where the resistor should be in relation to the device/led or does it matter? Ex: Should resistor be on positive stream or negative stream
yeah wtf
it doesn't matter. Before or after is fine.
You can put the resistor after the LED?
I don't really understand why resistors work while being on any side of the LED. I have watched a few other youtube videos, but none of them have given me a satisfactory explanation. Can you tell why?
Also, does this stays the same if we are operating on an AC circuit?
Measure Voltage "across" a component. Measure Current "through" a component (circuit).
Sir can you also explain how to use a non auto ranging multimeter
i just notice the mA port is the same as the voltage slot for my multimeter, is it safe?
Doesn't the resistor have to go between the Power source and the controlled component? The diagram showed it on the ground side.
I know it is a low-voltage application, but if I have a circuit where an LED comes first, followed by an resistor and then a switch, like in your video, will the LED's lifespan not be reduced if the switch is toggled on and off every second? Wouldn't the LED receive a surge of 9 volts instead of its safe 3 volts each time the switch is activated, before the circuit stabilizes thanks to the resistor, potentially causing faster wear and tear to the LED, compared to a setup where the resistor is placed between the switch and the LED and the LED comes last in the circuit?"
You stated that the resister uses up current. Does it consume power like the LED or does it just restrict current? If it consumes power is it creating heat then?
TheKlickitat yes, resistors dissipate energy which is converted to heat energy that is why resistor wattage is important when designing electronics
thank you for the explanation.
I have a question! If you had 2 30 Ohm resistors would both of them together make a 60 Ohm resistance?
If you put them in series then yes, but if you put 2 30 ohm resistors in parallel they resist 15 ohms.
You wrote the value of the power source and the resistor on the schematic, so why didn't you write the value of the LED as well (i.e. 3.2V)?
3.2 volts is the max recommended voltage to be applied to the L.E.D.. It is derived from the maximum current (heat generation) that can pass through the L.E.D. without damage.
what multimeter do u have can we have a link???? plz answer somebody
In this case. Does it mather what order you conect the "swich, LED, and Restistans" ? or can this work in any order? Lets say, the resistance first. then the switch, then the LED?
I don't understand?
Which software did you use ?
can anybody tell me that what resistor do I know it control the flow of current but why we limit the current to light up led e.t.c why we do not decrease the voltage for it and why we use tranformers does it work same as resistor does I mean if we can turn on something just by decreasing current then why we use tranformers to drop voltages . . . I need answer thanks in advance