- Interactive displays for the EE Proto bulletin board.
- Clock displays: LED/analog? Voltmeters? Metric time? POSIX?
- Time synchronization: GPS, WWV, or WiFi beacon-frame timestamp?
- LED-strip-driver audio visualizer (light organ).
- MIDI control board (such as this Kickstarter project) with interesting interfaces.
- A digitally controlled analog synthesizer voice.
- A digital synthesizer voice (like these boxes).
- A complete drum machine box (with sequencer and voices).
- Drone synthesizer (for example, Drone Commander or Drone Lab).
- Lecture demonstrations for Controls (PID box? SSE box?).
"Ah, to build, to build! That is the noblest art of all the arts." --- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882)
Monday, October 26, 2015
Design Project Ideas
Gathering some ideas for the design projects:
Monday, October 19, 2015
Grades
For each of the first six labs, consider the following questions:
- What worked?
- What didn't?
- What are your lessons learned?
- What could (should) you have done better?
- What grade do you give yourself on the lab?
- What changes (if any) should be made to this lab for future classes?
Monday, October 5, 2015
Lab B5
Two options for Lab B5:
- Analog filter design: Design a three-channel audio spectrum analyzer, with fourth-order band-pass filters and corners at 20 Hz, 200 Hz, 2 kHz, and 20 kHz (at least three channels and at least fourth order; more would be better).
- Analog computer design: Read Section 12.3 in Roberge's Operational Amplifiers. Simulate and build the scaled analog computer for Van der Pol's Equation in Figure 12.16. Then, simulate and build an analog computer for Duffing's Equation (or some other interesting differential equation in consultation with the staff).
October Events
Three events this month that you need to attend:
- Sunday, October 18, 9am: Electronics Flea Market at MIT
- Saturday, October 24, all day: Analog Heaven North East Synthfest at Olin
- Monday, October 26, 7:30pm, Blade Runner, Olin Auditorium
Thursday, September 24, 2015
Lab A4 Microcontroller
Lab A4 is to layout a simple microcontroller board. One possibility is a copy of the Arduino Micro, and you can find the schematic on their website. Other possibilities can be discussed with the staff.
Thursday, September 17, 2015
Lab A3 Teardown
Part 1:
Part 2:
Commercial Electronics Autopsy: Take apart a piece of commercial electronics (provided). Take pictures, study construction techniques, draw a block diagram, write a bill of materials of major parts (top ten), and find some data sheets, but don't draw a schematic. Make a list of the major components; the main integrated circuits are important, of course, but don't overlook interesting examples of passive components, sensors, connectors, switches (and other controls), internal cable assemblies, heat sinks, mechanical elements, etc. Deliverables (as a web page):
- Get a toolkit (if you don't already have one).
- Review the some teardowns at iFixit and send me an email with a link to your favorite one, with a short explanation of why it's your favorite. Be sure to venture beyond the lists of "Recent" and "Popular". For some examples, see
- Watch the following video (a teardown of an Anritsu spectrum analyzer from Mike's Electric Stuff; see his YouTube channel for more videos).
Part 2:
Commercial Electronics Autopsy: Take apart a piece of commercial electronics (provided). Take pictures, study construction techniques, draw a block diagram, write a bill of materials of major parts (top ten), and find some data sheets, but don't draw a schematic. Make a list of the major components; the main integrated circuits are important, of course, but don't overlook interesting examples of passive components, sensors, connectors, switches (and other controls), internal cable assemblies, heat sinks, mechanical elements, etc. Deliverables (as a web page):
- Link to service manual (if found)
- Basic test results showing operation (or non-operation)
- Pictures of the disassembly and the insides
- Block diagram of the system
- Bill of materials of ten major parts, with date codes and datasheets
- Discussion of the mechanical design, including functional and decorative elements
- Short presentation for informal show-and-tell session
Extra credit for salvaging and reusing some interesting part from your autopsy (for example: motors, sensors, LEDs, switches, fans, etc.).
Thursday, September 10, 2015
Lecture pointers
Here are some pointers for lecture notes on this blog:
- Lecture 1: Example circuit boards
- Lecture 1: Toolkit contents
- Lecture 2: Schematic dos and don'ts
- Lecture 2: Bills of material
- Lecture 4: Resistors and capacitors
Tuesday, September 8, 2015
Course Schedule
Here is a (preliminary) schedule for the lab projects:
Chronologically:
Labs 1 and 2: due by September 14For the design project, the rough schedule is:
Lab 3: due September 24
Lab 4: layout files due October 8
Lab 5: due October 19
Lab 6: due October 29
Project proposal: October 22For your own learning goals, the schedule is:
Architecture design review: October 29
Schematic design review: November 5
Layout design review: November 12
Layout files due: November 19
Boards back by: November 30
Final presentations: December 10
Initial statement of goals: September 17Some of these dates may be flexible. Some of these dates are not (when the layout files are due). Completing the labs and the design project will require some multitasking (particularly around Labs 5 and 6).
Midterm downselect and revision: October 22
Final deliverables: December 10
Chronologically:
September 14: Labs 1 and 2
September 17: Initial statement of goals
September 24: Lab 3
October 8: Lab 4 layout files due (no slip)
October 19: Lab 5
October 22: Goals revision and project proposal
October 29: Lab 6 and architecture design review
November 5: Schematic design review
November 12: Layout design review
November 19: Layout files due (no slip)
November 30: Boards back
December 10: Final deliverables and presentations
Saturday, September 5, 2015
Assessment and Grades
Your grade in EE Proto will be based on three key self assessments, of equal weight:
- Your performance on each of the first six labs (equally weighted).
- Your success on, effort in, and "lessons learned" from your design project.
- A start-of-term statement of your own learning goals for the course, a middle-of-term revision of these goals, and an end-of-term assessment thereof.
- A first-draft statement of your learning goals (about half a page, due September 17). Create a Google document and share it with the professor (at his Gmail account). Write a list of three to five goals that you would like to achieve during this course. Your goals can take any form as long as they represent your own interests and learning objectives for this course. For each goal, briefly explain in three to four sentences, what you hope to do or learn, how you plan to achieve it, and how you will measure success.
At least one of your goals should be a "service" goal, that is, an effort to make the course better in the future. Some examples: a how-to guide or instruction manual, a new assignment or lab for the course, content for the blog or course website, a course wiki, a new (electronic) display for the AC hallway bulletin board, etc., etc.
- Goals down-select and revision (one to two pages, due mid term after Lab 6). From your first draft, pick your three "final" goals for the course (including one or more service goals). You may clarify, revise, or change your goals at this point. For each of your final goals, add a detailed description of your final deliverables and assessment plan.
- Final deliverables, as described in your mid-term plan (due end of term).
Thursday, September 3, 2015
Lab 1: Simulate and Fabricate
The assignment for Lab 1 is to get a jump start on simulating circuits and doing board layout. Here are the individual steps:
Note that the ground connection isn't strictly necessary, since this circuit is battery powered, but its inclusion will improve the convergence of your LTspice simulation.
- Complete the first-day questionnaire.
- Install DipTrace on your laptop. See the Olin instructions here.
- Install the Windows version of LTSpice on your laptop. Download here.
- Get the DipTrace Tutorial PDF file.
- Complete the schematic and layout tutorial, pages 1 through 79.
- Complete a transient simulation of the "Astable Flip Flop" in LTSpice. Plot the current in the LEDs over a ten-second period.
- Complete a second layout of the "Astable Flip Flop" using the following surface-mount parts (on a two-layer board):
- Transistors: ON Semiconductor MMBT3904LT1G (SOT23 package, double check pin assignments!)
- Capacitors: 33uF TDK Corp C3216X5R1C336M160AB (1206 package)
- LEDs: Lite-On LTST-C170GKT (0805 package)
- Resistors R2 and R3: 680 ohms (0805 package)
- Resistors R1 and R4: 34 kilohms (0805 package)
- 9V battery connector (use same through-hole connector)
- Minimize the size of your PCB layout to save space. Less than two square-inches is the goal.
- Produce Gerber files for your design and submit them to OSH Park for fabrication.
Note that the ground connection isn't strictly necessary, since this circuit is battery powered, but its inclusion will improve the convergence of your LTspice simulation.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)