This is only a preview of the May 2024 issue of Silicon Chip. You can view 45 of the 112 pages in the full issue, including the advertisments. For full access, purchase the issue for $10.00 or subscribe for access to the latest issues. Items relevant to "Compact Frequency Divider":
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SILICON
SILIC
CHIP
www.siliconchip.com.au
Publisher/Editor
Nicholas Vinen
Technical Editor
John Clarke – B.E.(Elec.)
Technical Staff
Jim Rowe – B.A., B.Sc.
Bao Smith – B.Sc.
Tim Blythman – B.E., B.Sc.
Advertising Enquiries
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Regular Contributors
Allan Linton-Smith
Dave Thompson
David Maddison – B.App.Sc. (Hons 1),
PhD, Grad.Dip.Entr.Innov.
Geoff Graham
Associate Professor Graham Parslow
Dr Hugo Holden – B.H.B, MB.ChB.,
FRANZCO
Ian Batty – M.Ed.
Phil Prosser – B.Sc., B.E.(Elec.)
Cartoonist
Louis Decrevel
loueee.com
Founding Editor (retired)
Leo Simpson – B.Bus., FAICD
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Editorial Viewpoint
Our new Mini Projects
Starting with this issue, we have a new section
for the magazine: Mini Projects, sponsored by Jaycar
Electronics. You can think of this as somewhere
between Circuit Notebook and our regular projects.
The idea is that they will be simple, coming in at 2-3
pages each, with two or three in each issue.
They are designs that relative beginners should be
able to understand and build, using parts that can be
easily obtained at your local Jaycar store and assembled in a few hours at most.
Unlike in the Circuit Notebook column, which consists mainly of
contributed circuits, we have built and tested these designs. The articles
include a full list of parts, some photos, typically a circuit or wiring diagram,
plus links to software and source code when required. They won’t need a
custom PCB, instead using a breadboard or protoboard if more than a handful
of components are involved.
Due to the shorter article length, we’ll likely leave some of the finer details
to the reader/constructor. Given that the circuits will generally be pretty
straightforward, that should not pose any obstacles to building them.
We have wanted to present simpler projects for a while now, but there were
a few roadblocks. For a start, many of the simple things you can build with a
handful of parts have already been presented in the past, either in earlier issues
of Silicon Chip or in other magazines like Electronics Australia. We didn’t
want to publish too many articles similar to existing ones as it seems lazy.
Also, many ideas that start simple (or seem simple initially) increase in
complexity by the time they are finished. So even when we have planned to
have more basic constructional articles in the past, it hasn’t always panned
out that way.
This new column should satisfy the demand for more straightforward and
educational projects. One of the great things about these new articles is that
they all use off-the-shelf parts. You can go from reading the article to buying
the parts, assembling and testing one of the designs in a few hours!
The Mini Projects will not displace our usual projects, feature articles, and
other columns, at least most of the time. We still plan to run four projects in
most issues, along with two or three Mini Projects, for a total of 6-7 projects.
We see this as a significant benefit to our readers, who will get more content
thanks to Jaycar’s support!
I can’t rule out the possibility that we will occasionally have to hold
over one other article (eg, a smaller project) to be able to fit the extra Mini
Projects. I don’t expect that to happen too often, but it may occasionally occur,
depending on factors like article lengths. Regardless, we will still have more
content than before on average.
You will not be surprised to discover that these articles will mainly use
parts sold by Jaycar. That doesn’t mean you are locked into shopping there;
those products will be available elsewhere, and many readers may already
have most of them in their collections. (Obviously, Jaycar would like you to
be their customer, but we can’t twist your arm...)
Still, Jaycar has indicated that they may start offering discounted packages
of the parts required for specific Mini Projects. If that happens (I can’t promise
it will), we’ll have the details in those articles.
To make it easier to find software and other items relating to the Mini
Projects, we are allocating them numbers. However, note that they might not
be published in the same order they were produced. For example, in this
issue we have three Jaycar/Silicon Chip Mini Projects: JMP001, JMP003 &
JMP004. There is a JMP002 but it will appear in a future issue.
by Nicholas Vinen
24-26 Lilian Fowler Pl, Marrickville 2204
2
Silicon Chip
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
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