Hello, I am running through a series of projects from an old digital circuit book I got for almost nothing at a local store.
One, of the things it has me building is essentially a logic board test kit. One of the items to build is a 7404 both 1MHz and 1KHz frequency output using 3 of the 6 hex inverters.
Attached is the picture in the book, bear in mind the book is black and white so picture it that way ignore the red dots you see..

Simply he has a 150ohm resister and a .022uF cap to create a 1KHZ (square?) wave. I'm having the hardest time building this on a breadboard. I have traced it out a million times and I never seem to get it right. I've left out the 3 unused inverters and the VCC and GND connections for the 7404.
No mater what I do I always get a frequency of 60Hz, I can fool around on the Oscilloscope and get it to change but not much maybe up to 100KHZ (I'll be honest I'm trying to learn the oscilloscope, very confused). Should this produce a 1KHz sine wave or a square wave? measure measurements from OUT far right last output of the 3 gates shows up as 60MHZ on my benchtop DMM as well so I don't trust me moving the scope around to get a different value as its true output. Anyways never gotten 1KHZ. Is that right with this circuit?
He shows the same circuit with a 1500uF capacitor given a 1MHZ wave. Presumably using the other half of the 7404 or another together.
Help, I ran this on some online sims and didn't get any values for a frequency, and I got errors.
How would one wire this in a breadboard? Also is there a better more stable way to get 1 KHZ wave with just a resistor, capacitor, and a 7404 chip? I really need help with the breadboard portion.
Apologies I know this is a dumb and easy question for most of you. Take pity on a newbie who literally spent the entire weekend nothing trying to get this to work. I found one diagram online for a different chip 7414 I think, and it looked like what I needed (different values) but the breadboard drawing leaves one end of the resistor unconnected to anything I can't see how that works. I build that circuit regardless and nothing, 60MHZ with a garbled output on the scope. I'm using a ceramic cap does that matter? I notice if I push down on the DuPont wires near the cap or on the cap itself the wave cleans up a bit and almost looks like a PWM square wave still pretty messy...I dunno Im lost. This is driving me mad. I don't want to buy other chips or parts, this should be possible yes? I mean it's literally the beginning of the book. I know there are better chips ect..to pull this off but to start off with I want to see if the circuit is even right. Someone with talent and maybe 5 minutes could wire this up and test it if it gives 1KHz with a square wave take a picture of the bread board, please!!
I did order some 7404's that have a Schmitt trigger, I heard they make this process easier. That's all I know I'll have to research that...
Respectfully,
Anglerfish
One, of the things it has me building is essentially a logic board test kit. One of the items to build is a 7404 both 1MHz and 1KHz frequency output using 3 of the 6 hex inverters.
Attached is the picture in the book, bear in mind the book is black and white so picture it that way ignore the red dots you see..

Simply he has a 150ohm resister and a .022uF cap to create a 1KHZ (square?) wave. I'm having the hardest time building this on a breadboard. I have traced it out a million times and I never seem to get it right. I've left out the 3 unused inverters and the VCC and GND connections for the 7404.
No mater what I do I always get a frequency of 60Hz, I can fool around on the Oscilloscope and get it to change but not much maybe up to 100KHZ (I'll be honest I'm trying to learn the oscilloscope, very confused). Should this produce a 1KHz sine wave or a square wave? measure measurements from OUT far right last output of the 3 gates shows up as 60MHZ on my benchtop DMM as well so I don't trust me moving the scope around to get a different value as its true output. Anyways never gotten 1KHZ. Is that right with this circuit?
He shows the same circuit with a 1500uF capacitor given a 1MHZ wave. Presumably using the other half of the 7404 or another together.
Help, I ran this on some online sims and didn't get any values for a frequency, and I got errors.
How would one wire this in a breadboard? Also is there a better more stable way to get 1 KHZ wave with just a resistor, capacitor, and a 7404 chip? I really need help with the breadboard portion.
Apologies I know this is a dumb and easy question for most of you. Take pity on a newbie who literally spent the entire weekend nothing trying to get this to work. I found one diagram online for a different chip 7414 I think, and it looked like what I needed (different values) but the breadboard drawing leaves one end of the resistor unconnected to anything I can't see how that works. I build that circuit regardless and nothing, 60MHZ with a garbled output on the scope. I'm using a ceramic cap does that matter? I notice if I push down on the DuPont wires near the cap or on the cap itself the wave cleans up a bit and almost looks like a PWM square wave still pretty messy...I dunno Im lost. This is driving me mad. I don't want to buy other chips or parts, this should be possible yes? I mean it's literally the beginning of the book. I know there are better chips ect..to pull this off but to start off with I want to see if the circuit is even right. Someone with talent and maybe 5 minutes could wire this up and test it if it gives 1KHz with a square wave take a picture of the bread board, please!!
I did order some 7404's that have a Schmitt trigger, I heard they make this process easier. That's all I know I'll have to research that...
Respectfully,
Anglerfish