Hello,
I am currently a high school student and I would like to learn more about electronics. I have been working with the Raspberry Pi Zero WH the past year but I have mainly focused on programming with Python. Now, I would like to expand my knowledge of electronics.
I know the basics (which I need to review): Ohm's law, Kirchoff's laws, Thevenin's theorem, RLC circuits... After doing some research, I have come to the conclusion that the books which suit me the most are Practical Electronics for Inventors and Make: Electronics but I have several questions regarding the components I need to use to practise. In Amazon, I have seen a kit which includes everything I need for Make but it is quite pricey (+250$) and costs even more if I have to ship it to Europe. Are there any affordable kits that I can buy here? If not, should I buy the parts separately?
I already own the most essential components: resistors, LEDs, jumper wires, breadboard, multimeter, resistors, buttons... I lack transistors, ICs, potentiometers, diodes...
Thanks in advance,
Gerard
I am currently a high school student and I would like to learn more about electronics. I have been working with the Raspberry Pi Zero WH the past year but I have mainly focused on programming with Python. Now, I would like to expand my knowledge of electronics.
I know the basics (which I need to review): Ohm's law, Kirchoff's laws, Thevenin's theorem, RLC circuits... After doing some research, I have come to the conclusion that the books which suit me the most are Practical Electronics for Inventors and Make: Electronics but I have several questions regarding the components I need to use to practise. In Amazon, I have seen a kit which includes everything I need for Make but it is quite pricey (+250$) and costs even more if I have to ship it to Europe. Are there any affordable kits that I can buy here? If not, should I buy the parts separately?
I already own the most essential components: resistors, LEDs, jumper wires, breadboard, multimeter, resistors, buttons... I lack transistors, ICs, potentiometers, diodes...
Thanks in advance,
Gerard