[sdiy] Good Books
John L Marshall
john.l.marshall at gte.net
Wed Apr 25 06:06:32 CEST 2001
Here are some my favorite analog books:
Operational Amplifiers; Tobey, Graeme & Huelsman
Application of Operational Amplifiers; Graeme
Function Circuits; Wong & Ott
Designing With Operational Amplifiers; Graeme
Burr-Brown Applications Handbook
The Handbook of Linear IC Applications; Burr-Brown
Nonlinear Circuits Handbook; Analog Devices
IC Op-Amp Cookbook; Jung
How to Build and Use Electronic Devices Without Frustration, Panic,
Mountains of Money or an Engineering Degree; Hoenig & Payne
The ARRL Handbook. Yes, this book is for Hamsters but general electronics
theory and construction practices are included. A wealth of information.
Published annually.
If you are involved with tubes, there is no substitute for the Radiotron
Designers Handbook.
----- Original Message -----
From: JP <jpotter2 at tampabay.rr.com>
To: <synth-diy at node12b53.a2000.nl>
Sent: Tuesday, April 24, 2001 7:57 PM
Subject: [sdiy] Good Books
> Rene wrote:
>
> "...Read the CMOS cookbook and some CEM datasheets instead..."
>
> anybody have any other good reading material to suggest? I've got alot of
> the Mims stuff but I'm looking for more of the "why does sticking a
> capacitor here in the circuit cut down on feedback" than "stick a
capacitor
> here to cut down on feedback" - more of why and how a circuit works than
> simple schematics w/ a footnote or two.
>
> I've also got Craig Anderton's book "Projects for Musicians" or whatever
> it's called - I'm looking for something along those lines (it goes more in
> depth as to how/why a circuit works).
>
> Thanks,
>
> JP
>
>
>
More information about the Synth-diy
mailing list