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/electronics/ - Electronics engineering

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File: 1444693190125.jpg (13.21 KB, 500x375, 4:3, coffeewarmer.jpg)

d94eab No.156[Reply]

I just bought a Dazey Corporation Coffee Warmer cw-10 serial number 101789 for 3 dollars at a thrift store and was wondering if there was a way to make it get hot enough to heat small coals. On the back it says it puts out 25 Watts, 120 Volts and 60 Hz, is there something I can do to make it stronger?

d10f04 No.157

File: 1444944382564.jpg (141.24 KB, 728x1040, 7:10, 45315966-thewaykitchenswor….jpg)

>>156

Not much, those are simple devices consisting of a resistor (heating element) and a switch. Since you can't usually change the heating element you can't change the power.

You could remove modify or change the thermostat that turns the device off when reaching higher temperatures and see what happens, but this is not recommended.




File: 1424385832688-0.jpg (13.41 KB, 250x250, 1:1, frs-imx6series.jpg)

File: 1424385832688-1.png (14.09 KB, 347x73, 347:73, osmocombb.png)

f382f8 No.13[Reply]

How about an open source phone/umpc/phablet?
I have had this project in mind for some time now.

My current idea is a system based around the freescale imx6quad, that fucker has everything and it is very open. 2d/3d graphics acceleration, sata, gigabit LAN, chip level encryption, tamper security, LVDS, MIPI DSI, CSI camera interface and much more. The gsm module power and mic connections can be controlled by the processor, allowing full control and fredom over your device. It would be the size of an UMPC while still allowing you full freedom and even stuff like sms and call encryption. If enough people are into the idea we could might even get it kickstartet. I hope the EE's of cyber are interested since this would grant us full control over our personal data.

The project github is at https://github.com/Anongineer/OSPhone

IRC channel is at #OSPhone on rizon
63 posts and 2 image replies omitted. Click reply to view.
Post last edited at

ab84aa No.126

>>13

I'm going to do some concept images.


ab84aa No.127

>>126

Question, do we want a front camera? I don't think many of us here are into taking selfies really so I'm not sure if it's needed.


14d56c No.130

Does /tech/ know about this? They'd totally be in.


2a0c5c No.150

Has anybody gotten anywhere with this in the last seven months or has everybody given up?

It sounds like a pretty awesome project.


6dd6f9 No.151

So, I was involved in the initial discussion of this, but was more interested in software than hardware and this project never even got that far. (yet, to be fair)

For reasons unrelated, I was reminded of this sort of thing a couple of days ago. I've been working with the LPC1788, a cortex M3 that runs at 120MHz- slower even than a feature phone from 2008 or whenever.

However, the processor has a lot of peripheral features and could run a phone, though it could never run an OS like android. I was contemplating making a dumb phone out of it, based on UClinux with an ncurses interface, where you could perform basic operations like looking up numbers in a phone book, texting, and making calls. It occurred to me that really the only thing necessary to make that into a "smart" phone is a browser. So if netsurf was running on it you'd have an (admittedly terrible) smartphone. The only difference between the smart and dumb phones (based on this processor) is that one has to have enough screen/keyboard to use a browser. This gives a somewhat interesting path of being able to build a dumb phone and upgrade it into something that could be used as a smarphone.

I wonder if this is actually a good idea, it's possible we could base it on something like the i.MX233 which is a little faster (though less RAM I believe). The benefits would be as follows:

-> the processor is slow enough that anyone can build a dev board without worrying about impedance matching or trace length. Easy to do with free software.

-> the parts could be all 0603 / QFP and bigger, which are easy to assemble- anyone with a $50 soldering iron can do it, though maybe not quite as well as people with a PnP and oven.

-> you get quick gratification from building a dumb phone, which you can go ahead and use, and develop programs for it. You don't need to spend years building something good enough to compete with the latest crap from apple/samsung/whoever doesn't suck.

So now instead of suggesting that we build something that would be challenginPost too long. Click here to view the full text.




File: 1424417604739.png (311.18 KB, 2000x3444, 500:861, 2000px-MOS6502.svg.png)

74af38 No.28[Reply]

Any other MOS-cultists here?

ca70c5 No.33

Zilog gets my heat going :^)

d1e87b No.149

If I were going to get nostalgic over an old CPU, it would be the 6809. RadioShack CoCo w/ machine language cartridge FTW




File: 1424353281409.jpg (2.93 MB, 2592x1936, 162:121, Typical Test Setup.JPG)

50c014 No.7[Reply]

Test equipment thread.

>post scopes

>post logic analyzers
>post DMM's
>post ESR meters

And everything else /testequipment/
1 post and 1 image reply omitted. Click reply to view.

5120d6 No.16

File: 1424390479371.jpg (91.45 KB, 850x545, 170:109, DSOX4024-825.jpg)

>>11
>$471 minumum
I'm probably going to end up getting an old CRT one for <$100 on ebay to hold me over until I can afford a real one. Last job I was using the Agilent MSOX4154A and it completely spoiled me with the touch screen, freq counter, function gen and all the toys added on to it.

50c014 No.40

>>16
Even renting one of those new keysight scopes is more than my montly rent. I'm pretty sure they have the best ADC in the world.

5120d6 No.49

>>40
Where would you even rent something like that? Where I live I wouldn't even know where to begin.

d6768f No.131

File: 1432494008497.jpg (378.69 KB, 1476x830, 738:415, 1424840481834.jpg)

>>11

I'm going to buy that same exact rigol, I tried to find an analog scope in my area, but the ones I found were highly overpriced, maybe because they should be in a museum.

My uni wont toss away those sweet, sweet hp 54600, I love the color of phosphor plus I want an analog to beat them up with circuits with lots of inductive kicks and high voltage. If they ever throw them away I'll be the first in line.


f11d31 No.144

File: 1437007388517-0.jpg (321.45 KB, 1632x1224, 4:3, DSC_1139.jpg)

File: 1437007388517-1.jpg (342.45 KB, 1632x1224, 4:3, DSC_1188.jpg)

>>131

Got it a couple of days ago, extremely pleased with it, I used the 100Mhz hack and unlocked a few extra features. I'm going to ground my plugs because it picks a lot of hum, maybe I'll get an isolation transformer, but I don't see the point, since I'm not probing dangerous circuits.

This is my modest rig, sorry, the pic is kinda blurry.




File: 1436063193738.jpg (12.39 KB, 392x523, 392:523, unnamed.jpg)

ea34df No.141[Reply]

I need to wire a device to a 3-prong plug, but I have no experience whatsoever with this stuff. I found this diagram on my device, so now I know that it's a one phase circuit and the blue wire is the ground but that's all.

Which wire do I hook up to the neutral lead and which to the hot lead? I'm assuming that getting this wrong will fry the whole system

ea34df No.142

I believe I've found my answer so now I'm going to let this thread 404. I'm off to go ruin my equipment


3b668a No.143

>>142

>Not telling all of us.

>Being the "Nevermind found it" guy.

I would say, since it is alternating current we are talking about here, the way you wire the purple and black leads to the connection prong wouldn't matter, but I'm not sure about the power regulation in whichever country you might be, and I'm kinda talking out of my ass, so, did it blow up?




File: 1433202606784.jpg (103.25 KB, 1025x576, 1025:576, 1432834137805.jpg)

9dcbcb No.132[Reply]

So let's say I wanted to design an imageboard server on an FPGA.

No general-purpose computing or higher-order logic, it's not meant to be Turing-complete. I want the thing to natively speak chan at an electronic level.

It'd be broken down into a number of functional blocks and subunits, first of all.

One communications subunit for Ethernet PHY, MAC, TCP, and IP.

One data subunit for storage and retrieval of bulk data, and intrinsic microcode to handle that.

One control subunit, which contains registers/counters, and processes and fetches instructions from storage, starting at the microcode.

And one subunit containing necessary electronics like power-distribution, clocks, etc.

The core of the system would be a simple instruction fetch in the control subunit, which runs a small microcode from storage to prepare configuration and state.

Storage would be handled by an MMC or NAND driver, and said storage holds the higher-level code implementing the imageboard: a table of jmps correlating addresses to post IDs, and a post structure of simple "fetch [range]; jmp [template code subroutine]; fetch [range]" and so forth.

A couple registers will contain the current post ID, and the IP session of whoever's being served at that moment.

I fear the hardest part, would be keeping all the multiple internet sessions open, alive, and having data clocked out to them/in from them appropriately.

5f468d No.133

Sure sounds like you're reinventing the wheel. Good luck! :)




File: 1424798023708.jpg (340.23 KB, 2560x1600, 8:5, 1419890165935.jpg)

7c464a No.103[Reply]

Where do you guys go normally to get your parts for building?

7dbcbc No.104

>>103
cables,LEDs,switches(i.e things hard to fuck up) : banggood(the cheapest i could find,really)

ICs : digikey distributors(cheaper than shopping directly at digikey if you hit a certain total),local shops(expensive as fuck and they put it in a fucking zipper bag)

also junk,old cash registers,clock radios etc.

cd4c12 No.109

>>103
ebay/salvaging

074a9f No.123

Rapid and Farnell. Always buy in bulk



File: 1424476251424.png (604.89 KB, 485x602, 485:602, CMOS VLSI.png)

e41015 No.47[Reply]

Good book, suggest it heartily

b5a86a No.81

I'm taking VLSI next quarter, it looks like its gonna get pretty gnarly



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