FreeTechBooks.com Homepage
FreeTechBooks.com
Free Online Computer Science and Programming Books, Textbooks, and Lecture Notes


Lessons In Electric Circuits
Reply with quote
Lessons In Electric Circuits

Author(s) : Tony R. Kuphaldt
Publication Date : 2003

Terms and Conditions:

The author wrote:
These books and all related files are published under the terms and conditions of the Design Science License. These terms and conditions allow for free copying, distribution, and/or modification of this document by the general public.

Book excerpts:

Lessons in Electric Circuits was compiled from years of lecture notes and ideas, with the primary goal was to put readable, high-quality information of industrial electronics into the hands of students, yet keep the book as affordable as possible. This book was written to be a good enough book without delving too heavy on the math, while still maintaining a lot of important information.

It must be mentioned that although the book strives to maintain technical accuracy in all of its content, the subject matter is broad and harbors many potential dangers. Electricity maims and kills without provocation, and deserves the utmost respect. Experimentation on the part of the reader is strongly encouraged, but only with circuits powered by small batteries where there is no risk of electric shock, fire, explosion, etc. High-power electric circuits should be left to the care of trained professionals! The Design Science License clearly states that neither the author nor any contributors to this book bear any liability for what is done with its contents.

Simulating with SPICE:

One way to reduce the necessity of setting up your own laboratory, is to utilize computer simulation. One particular computer program called SPICE serves that purpose. It is a text-based piece of software intended to model circuits and provide analyses of voltage, current, frequency, etc. Although nothing is quite as good as building real circuits to gain knowledge in electronics, computer simulation is an excellent alternative.

One of the advantages is that SPICE could be used within a textbook to present circuit simulations to allow students to "observe" the phenomena for themselves. This way, the readers could learn the concepts inductively (by interpreting SPICE's output) as well as deductively (by interpreting the book's explanations). Furthermore, in seeing SPICE used over and over again, they should be able to understand how to use it themselves, providing a perfectly safe means of experimentation on their own computers with circuit simulations of their own design.

Arrow View/Download Lessons In Electric Circuits



Last edited by ndaru on Tue Nov 25, 2008 7:53 pm; edited 3 times in total
View user's profileSend private message
Better Site
Reply with quote
I found that the link included in this post gave a file not found when attempting to download any of the pdf/archive files. Try:

http://www.ibiblio.org/obp/electricCircuits/

This has all of the files.

View user's profileSend private message
URL changed
Reply with quote
Got it. Thanks. Smile

View user's profileSend private message
Reply with quote
hello,
Do you know some webs which offer free ebook in the following sections:
-Electrical Engineering
-High Voltage Engineering
-Dielectric and Electrical Material
Or a forum gathering the people works in these fields?
Thank you very much

View user's profileSend private message
Reply with quote
Dear tinkhoi,
I know two sites with electrical engineering books Cool

http://www.e-dsp.com/free-ebooks/

and

http://www.rfzone.org/free-rf-ebooks/

I hope you will find the things you need there.

Good luck Very Happy

View user's profileSend private message
  
   
 Reply to topic