Introducing Learning the Art of Electronics | Learning Electronics In The Lab With Jay Jay

This post is part of my video blog and you can find more information about this video over here.

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In this video we introduce a new feature of the show. In these segments we will be working through Learning the Art of Electronics. The notes will be kept on the wiki: John’s Wiki § Learning the Art of Electronics.

We will be doing a total of 27 videos for this feature. 25 labs, this introduction, and a conclusion. Videos will come out on the first Tuesday of every month (hopefully!).

We did a new book teardown for this book last year: New Book Teardown #3: Learning The Art of Electronics: A Hands-On Lab Course (2016) | In The Lab. You can see in the comments a number of people encouraged me to make videos for this book, so that’s what we’re doing now.

Also a shout out to my mate over on Learning as a hobby for encouraging me to undertake this project.

Thanks very much for watching! And please remember to hit like and subscribe! :)


Following is a product I use picked at random from my collection which may appear in my videos. Clicking through on this to find and click on the green affiliate links before purchasing from eBay or AliExpress is a great way to support the channel at no cost to you. Thanks!

JST XH2.54 6pin Pre-crimped ConnectorThis is an image of the product.

Let’s go shopping!

All You Need To Know About The Diode Test Mode On Your Multimeter To Fix Stuff

Today I watched All You Need To Know About The Diode Test Mode On Your Multimeter To Fix Stuff. Richard listed some typical forward voltages across various types of diodes:

  • Schottky Diode ~ 0.15V
  • Germanium Diode ~ 0.22V – 0.28V
  • Fast Switching Diode ~ 0.4V – 0.45V
  • Silicon Diode ~ 0.5V – 0.6V
  • Red LED ~ 1.7V – 1.8V
  • Yellow LED ~ 1.8V
  • Green LED ~ 2.2V – 2.3V

10 Things I Wish I Knew When I Started Microsoldering

I really enjoyed watching this video: 10 Things I Wish I Knew When I Started Microsoldering. The ten things are:

  1. You can only learn by actually working on motherboards
  2. You can actually get good quality tools (for cheap) from AliExpress
  3. Just because a tool works well for someone else doesn’t mean it will work well for you
  4. 90% of good soldering comes from having an understanding how heat works and how heat dissipates
  5. All the pros that you see on YouTube are still learning too!
  6. Know your limits, there are some problems you can’t fix
  7. Some things aren’t worth fixing because of the time and effort and cost involved, but sometimes things are worth fixing just for practice and learning purposes
  8. BGA work isn’t as scary as it seems or is made out to be
  9. Buy your consumables in bulk
  10. Spend time learning from pros on YouTube!