WD0AJG's Ham Rado Daily

Thursday, April 11, 2019

Fwd: STEM - Musical Doorbell - Radio Waves - DPP Basics



Newsletter #127
 
 
 

EASING INTO STEM

 

I'm often asked what the best way is to support STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math) education with electronics. At the high school level, as soon as I start talking about Arduino boards and sensors, teachers tend to run away. It's intimidating to set up an electronics workshop from scratch. Think of all the necessary infrastructure that needs to be constructed — from multimeters and soldering irons to parts bins — and the components to fill them.

 
 
 

BUILD A CUSTOMIZABLE MUSICAL DOORBELL

 

When my wife and I moved into our current home a few years back, it didn't have a doorbell, so I decided to make one using a PIC. You can select from among eight different tone sequences from a single doorbell switch, or up to four doorbell switches, each with its own tone sequence, for different doors/locations.

 
 
 

THE DISCOVERY OF RADIO WAVES

 

When the concept of electromagnetic waves was first proposed around 1864, it was met with great skepticism. As a result, the idea languished for a long time. It took several decades for a handful of dedicated persons — infatuated with the mysteries of electricity and magnetism — to finally put the theory on a solid footing.

 

Let's take a look back at this period that launched the serious study of radio waves. We'll examine the contribution of James Clerk Maxwell, the man most responsible for the concept. Next, we'll look at the work of several notable scientists who came after Maxwell, and see how they confirmed the existence of radio waves.

 
 
 

DIGITALLY PROGRAMMABLE POTENTIOMETER (DPP) BASICS

 

The digitally-programmable potentiometer (DPP) is a mixed signal, system-level control device performing a component-level function. The potentiometer adds variability to the analog circuit, while the digital controls add programmability. The DPP brings the high speed, programming, computation, and control of a processor to the variation of the potentiometer in a wide array of analog applications.

Build Something Today!

 

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