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Frank Gilliland wrote:
My point was that the art of homebrewing loses something when it's reduced to just plugging in a chip. Seems like everyone is ignoring how the circuits work and taking the 'black-box' approach instead. For example, the MAX038 is a chip that is a ready-made 0-20 MHz function generator with sweep, variable duty cycle, frequency modulation, and a phase discriminator. I'm sure that sounds cool to some, but if all you need is a 100 kHz square wave, why not learn how to build a square-wave oscillator with one or two transistors? And if you want a function generator, where's the fun in just hooking up power to a chip? That's not homebrewing, at least not in my book. I guess you wind your own capacitors, and collect lamp black to make your own resistors? there are tradeoffs in any project. Sure you could build a 50 pound toy that uses 200 watts to do a simple project, or do the same job in a handheld device that runs for weeks off a couple AA cells. Homebrewing is using what you can get to build what you want, as well as to meet the desired specifications. I started working with used parts in the '60s, but over the years I have moved on to more advanced projects. My biggest project to date, was building CH 58 TV in Destin, Florida with mostly defective and damaged 30 to forty year old broadcast equipment. It was a real challenge finding, or making replacement parts fore the RCA TTU-25B transmitter, and other old equipment. it was more of a restoration and homebrew project than it was meeting the deadline on the FCC construction permit. I ended up working as an engineering tech at L-3Com/Microdyne working on $80,000 telemetry receivers, and still design projects at home. I am working on some kits to allow people to build some test equipment they can't afford new, and don't need the performance of brand new Agilent or Tektronix equipment. It is cheaper to use "Chips", rather than discrete parts in a lot of circuits, and they design works better, too. Homebrewing should be used to learn something, and if you want to remain at the lowest level, enjoy yourself, but don't ridicule others who want to learn newer methods. -- Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
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