Re: Kent, John, and Artie!
rspst14 said:
I agree with John, go to your local library and check out a book on electronics for beginners. It helps to have a general background in electronics before you try to apply that information to guitar/amp electronics.
Ryan
There you go! Take an actual electronics course, buy the actual textbooks that teach the electronic theories, without that you are 100% screwed.
Make damn sure you brush up on your algebra, and trig as well ... Math? It's all Math!
If someone has three years in electronics they wouldn't be asking this question, Most computer based electronics courses start with a basic primer inelectricity as a pre requirement. They have to, even with all the digital gate studies (sound familiar Ryan ... :laugh2: ). Apparently, Bean is studying computers, NOT electronics ... big difference.
A course will often do better, why? Because you are taking your own money and time and investing it in it. Generally this means you'll actually study rather than buy a book, thumb thru it, and let it collect dust on a shelf ... all the while wondering why you don't understand things.
As far as guitar wiring, that stuff is pretty simple (conceptually at least), this is where basic concepts of phase and series-parallel come into play along with basic filters, and the handy dandy good old voltage divider. Impedance and it's effects are covered under any electronics course when entering into the AC section of study. If you don't understand the concept of how a pup works, you're screwed ... the basics are explained under the FAQ of the SD site, and about every other guitar site; if you have no understanding of signal flow you're screwed. These are all things that are covered on guitar sites (FAQ sections), and basic courses. Also a good book on the science of acoustics also is a must, why, because it tends to cover things such as pahse and frequencies more in depth in other ways. I remember giving Bean a long list of books, I'm not going to repost those, If he's interested he can do a forum search for them. Many, many electronics component manufacturers offer downloadable white papers regarding the use of filters and such (T.I. is great for this), there are many EE programs available from the web, Google search is wonderful for finding sites with tutorials. Radio Shack has a wonderful basic EE program (Protolab 4.0) for like $50 USD, it includes a dual trace oscilloscope, wattage, resistance, voltmeter, and ammeter. All your passive components (except for pots, you construct those), and some basic actives, suck as diodes, Fets , bipolars, mosfets, opamps. Also they have some (or at least at one time) descent course materials as well.
I mean if you just want to learn to wire guitars, why not by one of the 50 some odd books published on the very subject? It's not like they are hard to find. :cool3: