How Do I Connect an Oscillator, Capacitor, and Resistor on a Breadboard?

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To connect an oscillator, capacitor, and resistor on a breadboard, wire the positive terminal of the oscillator in series with the capacitor and resistor, ensuring a ground reference is established. The oscillator's positive should connect to bus 5, with the capacitor positioned across a5 and c5, and the resistor along d5 to maintain the series connection. The negative terminal should be connected to bus 7. Using a modern function generator is generally safe, as it includes built-in protections against common mistakes. This setup should function correctly if followed as described.
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I want to build a circuit consisting of an oscillator, capacitor, and resistor connected in series. I've never used a breadboard before though, and I want to make sure nothing goes wrong.

From what I understand, I need to wire the +ve of the oscillator in series with the capacitor and resistor. Then connect a reference to ground. I drew what I think this would look like in the image below:

Screen Shot 2014-10-01 at 8.12.50 PM.png


So I have the +ve wired along bus 5 supplying power to the capacitor connected across a5 and c5. I then hook up the resistor along d5 so it is in series with the capacitor and create a short to d7. The -ve is located along bus 7.

This would work I hope.
 
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Wow my first attempt was terrible. I have a new attempt that should actually work now I think:
 

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Zondrina said:
Wow my first attempt was terrible. I have a new attempt that should actually work now I think:
That's right. If your current source is any sort of modern function generator you shouldn't worry too much about just hooking it up and seeing if it works. Function generators usually have a breaker and other built-in protection that'll keep you from burning them up if you make a mistake, as long as you aren't doing anything crazy.
 
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