Where Can I Find Digital Measurement Tutorials for Electronic Engineering?

AI Thread Summary
Digital measurement tutorials for electronic engineering can be found on various websites that cover topics like encoders, decoders, latches, flip flops, counters, shift registers, and A/D and D/A conversions. Users are seeking comprehensive resources to enhance their understanding of electrical and electronic measurements essential for the field. A specific link to a tutorial site is provided, which may serve as a valuable starting point. The discussion emphasizes the importance of mastering these concepts for aspiring electronic engineers. Overall, the community is focused on sharing effective educational resources for digital measurement techniques.
electronic engineer
Messages
145
Reaction score
3
My friends i need good tutorials websites about measurements and digital measuring instruments such as:
encoder-decoder-latches-flip flops-counters-shift registers-A/D conversion - D/A conversion- Ladder lattice-Oscilloscopes ...


In general electrical and electronic measurements which an electronic engineering have to learn..

Thanks in advance!
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
Here you go.

http://users.telenet.be/educypedia/electronics/electronicaopening.htm
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Very basic question. Consider a 3-terminal device with terminals say A,B,C. Kirchhoff Current Law (KCL) and Kirchhoff Voltage Law (KVL) establish two relationships between the 3 currents entering the terminals and the 3 terminal's voltage pairs respectively. So we have 2 equations in 6 unknowns. To proceed further we need two more (independent) equations in order to solve the circuit the 3-terminal device is connected to (basically one treats such a device as an unbalanced two-port...
suppose you have two capacitors with a 0.1 Farad value and 12 VDC rating. label these as A and B. label the terminals of each as 1 and 2. you also have a voltmeter with a 40 volt linear range for DC. you also have a 9 volt DC power supply fed by mains. you charge each capacitor to 9 volts with terminal 1 being - (negative) and terminal 2 being + (positive). you connect the voltmeter to terminal A2 and to terminal B1. does it read any voltage? can - of one capacitor discharge + of the...
Thread 'Weird near-field phenomenon I get in my EM simulation'
I recently made a basic simulation of wire antennas and I am not sure if the near field in my simulation is modeled correctly. One of the things that worry me is the fact that sometimes I see in my simulation "movements" in the near field that seems to be faster than the speed of wave propagation I defined (the speed of light in the simulation). Specifically I see "nodes" of low amplitude in the E field that are quickly "emitted" from the antenna and then slow down as they approach the far...
Back
Top