Dave and Chris, just listened to the last AmpHour and really enjoyed it. I find there's nothing better to listen to while soldering up a protoboard on the bench.
At the very end you touched on a suggestion I made on the AmpHour site about beginners projects, and I think you misunderstood my point...
There seem to be so many newbies on the forums, It might be interesting to hear what you guys might suggest for the first projects a novice should tackle.
I went on the say that I have a set of projects I usually suggest, the first being a little 5Vdc linear power supply. I didn't mean that you guys should actually talk about BUILDING the projects, or the schematics or anything technical at all. So let me rephrase the question (and toss it out there to the whole forum)...
Given an absolute newbie to electronics, picture someone 12 years old who just bought their first soldering iron and their first second-hand meter, and now want's to build "stuff", what would you suggest their first dozen or two projects be?
Granted, probably all of us went through that phase decades ago (4 decades in my case), and granted there are thousands of small and simple projects out there on the web. What I've never seen out there on the web is something that plots a path for the first year of a new electronics enthusiast. Something that suggests "Build this" ... "now build this"..."and now..."
My list (I make it up again whenever the topic comes up) goes something like;
1 a 5Vdc liner power supply
2 some 555 based timer/time circuits (blinky LED circuits)
3 a simple audio amp (LM386 type thing)
Some CMOS logic/counter stuff?? Op Amps?? Filters? Radio?
My thought was that you could probably come up with a list of 24 simple projects that a new comer could build over the course of a year that would lay a (very) basic foundation. Then with some confidence and the first taste of competance they could veer off and head toward killowatt tube audio amps, or radio projects, or the next totally cool PIC/Arduino project, or whatever else piqued their interest.
I got motivated down this line very recently when I got totally pissed off to discover that component level basic electronics really wasn't offered in High Schools around here any more.