Hi everyone, new to electronics and new to this forum. I have a little understanding of electricity as it applies to motorcycles and powersports but I am trying to expand on my knowledge by using one of those Elenco electronic kits that does 130 projects on a single board. Been enjoying it quite a bit but I am currently stuck on a certain concept that is being used by several of the beginning projects. The current project is a single transistor metronome. I have uploaded the wiring diagram. I understand that the capacitor and transistor is what is turning the speaker on and off but I don't fully understand how the electrons are flowing. I believe that once the circuit is closed the 10uF capacitor charges through the collector/base diode of the transistor and once fully charged it creates a positive charge that shuts down the base of the transistor to stop the flow of electrons through the collector/emitter which would turn off the speaker and then the capacitor discharges until the base side of the transistor reaches a negative state compared to the collector. The potentiometer controls the rate of discharge and therefore the rate at which the metronome is heard. Maybe I am getting that right, maybe not. Where I get really confused iis the other side of the 10uF capacitor and its relationship to the transformer powering the speaker.
Anyway i really appreciate any help you can give.
Anyway i really appreciate any help you can give.