[sdiy] Best kept secret of amazing electronics books

cheater cheater cheater00 at gmail.com
Thu Nov 18 10:38:41 CET 2010


Ah yes, great advice. This brings me to the problem that I don't
really know where to get 2nd hand technical books in Munich :( Even
though it's a university city as you say!

D.

On Tue, Nov 16, 2010 at 13:46, Florian E. Teply <usenet at teply.info> wrote:
> On Tue, 16 Nov 2010 13:45:18 +1100
> "Paul Perry" <pfperry at melbpc.org.au> wrote:
>
>> >Tietze/Schenk - Halbleiterschaltungstechnik. It's certainly not
>> >ideal,
>> > but it covers a lot of ground including the maths involved, signal
>> > transmission, basic control theory, etc. Dunno about the English
>> > translation
>>
>> I've read the English translation, and it is very good.
>> But, the book is pretty scarce and very expensive.
>> I don't think I will ever own a copy.
>>
> Especially the English edition is hard to come by and damn expensive
> (usually north of 250 USD). I've seen only one for less than 100 EUR
> right now, and thats apparently from a library.
> It's not that bad with the german edition, where you can easily get
> older editions for about 25 EUR. The new ones are still way expensive
> and out of reach for the average student, but apart from the
> computer-related stuff (which basically isn't in there nowadays) the
> basics don't change by much. That's why you usually can find an older
> edition for said 25 bucks, use it in your studies and sell it again for
> the same price if you're in a university city ;-)
>
> HTH,
> Florian
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