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Electronics All-in-One For Dummies. Doug Lowe
Читать онлайн.Название Electronics All-in-One For Dummies
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781119822134
Автор произведения Doug Lowe
Жанр Отраслевые издания
Издательство John Wiley & Sons Limited
Understanding how solderless breadboards work
Although many different manufacturers make solderless breadboards, they all work pretty much the same way. The board consists of several hundred little holes called contact holes that are spaced
Beneath the plastic surface of the solderless breadboard, the contact holes are connected to one another inside the breadboard. These connections are made according to a specific pattern that’s designed to make it easy to construct even complicated circuits. Figure 6-7 shows how this pattern works.
FIGURE 6-7: The contact holes in typical solderless breadboards are internally connected following this pattern.
The holes in the middle portion of a solderless breadboard are connected in groups of five that are called terminal strips. These terminal strips are arranged in two groups, with a long open slot between the two groups, like a little ditch. It is in these holes that you will connect components such as resistors, capacitors, diodes, and integrated circuits.
It’s important to note that the rows of holes are not connected across the ditch. Thus, each row comprises two electrically separate terminal strips: one that connects the holes labeled A through E, the other connecting the holes labeled F through J.
The holes on the outside edges of the breadboard are called bus strips. There are two bus strips on either side of the breadboard. For most circuits, you will use the bus strips on one side of the breadboard for the voltage source and use the bus strips on the other side of the board for the ground circuit.
Most solderless breadboards use numbers and letters to designate the individual connection holes in the terminal strips. In Figure 6-7, the rows are labeled with numbers from 1 through 30, and the columns are identified with the letters A through J. Thus, the connection hole in the top-left corner of the terminal strip area is A1, and the hole in the bottom-right corner is J30. The holes in the bus strips are not typically numbered.
Solderless breadboards come in several different sizes. Small breadboards usually have about 30 rows of terminal strips and about 400 holes altogether. But you can get larger breadboards, with 60 or more rows with 800 or more holes.
Laying out your circuit
The most difficult challenge of creating a circuit on a solderless breadboard is the task of translating a schematic diagram into a layout that can be assembled on the breadboard. Only in rare cases will a circuit assembled on a breadboard look like the circuit’s schematic diagram. In most cases, the components are arranged differently and jumper wires are required to connect the components together.
One of the first challenges you face when building a circuit on a breadboard is connecting the pins on an integrated circuit. In a schematic diagram, the pin connections on an integrated circuit are rarely drawn in numerical order. For example, in the schematic diagram shown in Figure 6-4, the pin connections on the 555 timer IC are listed in this order, going counterclockwise from the top left: 7, 6, 2, 1, 3, 8, and 4. (Pin 5 is not used.)
But the pins on an actual 555 timer IC chip are arranged in numerical order starting at the top-left corner of the chip, as shown in Figure 6-8. Notice also that there are pins on the left and right side of the chip but none on the top or bottom. (The dot imprinted on the top of the chip is used to identify pin 1.)
FIGURE 6-8: How the pins are numbered on a 555 timer integrated circuit.
You’ll have to use your wits to re-create a circuit represented by a schematic diagram on a solderless breadboard. Here are some pointers to get you started:
Start by designating the top row of bus strips as the positive power supply and the bottom row as the ground. Connect your battery connector to holes in one end of these bus strips, but don’t yet connect the battery; it’s never a good idea to apply power to your circuit before you’ve finished assembling it.
Next, insert any ICs required for the circuit. Insert them so that they straddle the ditch in the middle of the terminal rows and, if your circuit has more than one IC, orient them all the same. You’ll only confuse yourself if pin 1 is on the bottom-left corner of some of your ICs and on the top-right corner of others.
Each pin of each IC is connected to a terminal strip that has four additional connection holes. Thus, you can connect as many as four additional components or jumper wires to each pin. If your circuit requires more than four component connections to a single pin, use a jumper wire to extend the pin’s terminal strip to an unused row anywhere on the breadboard.
Use jumper wires to connect the voltage source and ground pins for each IC to the nearest available connection hole in the voltage and ground buses.
Now work your way around the rest of the pins for each IC, connecting each component as needed. If one end of a component connects to an IC pin and the other end connects to either the voltage source or ground, plug one end of the component into an available connection hole on the terminal strip for the IC pin and plug the other end into the nearest available connection hole on either the voltage supply or ground buses.
If you want, you can trim the leads of the various components so that the parts fit closer to the breadboard. This results in a breadboard circuit that’s neater, and with fewer bare leads sticking up high above the breadboard, the likelihood of leads accidentally coming in contact with each other and creating a short-circuit are less likely. I usually don’t trim the leads, however, unless the circuit is complex enough that I’m not able to keep the component leads away from each other without cutting them down to size.
Assembling the coin-toss circuit on a solderless breadboard
This section presents a complete procedure for assembling the coin-toss circuit on a small solderless breadboard. When you get all your materials together, you should be able to complete this project in about an hour.
All the parts required to build this prototype circuit can be purchased from RadioShack, or you can order them online from any electronic parts supplier. For your convenience, here is a complete list of the parts you’ll need to build this prototype circuit, along with the RadioShack catalog part numbers:
Quantity | Description |
---|---|
1 |
Small solderless
|