Not sure if this is the correct board but here we go....
I've been trying to teach myself electronics as a hobby from various books and online tutorials however Im having a hard time almost as soon as i start. I have a fair understanding of components and what they do but when I try to use that info to construct basic circuits it seems to fall apart - the guides and schematics that I try to learn from just slap loads of components in with no explanation of why they are there or how the current is supposed to be flowing.
Example - I thought id try using a 555 timer to make a continuous led flasher. I found lots of diagrams for this kind of circuit but they all keep showing the pins in weird configurations. - Are you meant to just ignore where they have physically drawn them and just trust the numbers?
Also - doesnt current flow from negative to positive? Lots of diagrams i see like this one seem to suggest the opposite
https://www.google.co.uk/imgres?img...73RAhUlCsAKHfGsArQQMwgcKAAwAA&iact=mrc&uact=8
AND - in that diagram, im sure its supposed to flash the two leds alternately but i can only see how they could both be on at the same time - if pin 3 provides an additional current to allow it to push past the resistance of the second resistor and led then surely both would turn on at the same time?
When pin 3 is not providing an output voltage can current pass in the opposite direction? Allowing a circuit to be completed for just the 1st led and not the second?
Using these explanations of what each pin does https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/555_timer_IC I tried to follow what was going on on the left side of the diagram, bascially every pin except 3 and i just get lost each time..
Pin 8 is taking in the voltage from the supply (but also sometimes 3 is taking a lesser voltage in as well?)
Pin 4 - the reset, no idea
Pin 7 - discharge, "may discharge a capacitor between intervals" i can see a capacitor but i cant see how that pin discharges the capacitor or what defines when it does so.
Pin 6 - threshold, "timing interval ends when the voltage is greater than 2 thirds the ctrl" (ctrl pin is 5 - doesnt even seem to be in use) - also, even if 5 was in use - i assume its the capacitor discharging that would change the voltage going into pin 6? but in this diagram it suggests that the current is flowing in the other direction (away from 6 toward 1)
Pin 2 - trigger "timing interval starts when voltage drops below half the ctrl (again, there is no ctrl?!?!)
Pin 1 - ground reference voltage - is this acting as the ctrl? If so whats the point in pin 5?
So - as far as i can tell, the capacitor discharges and puts the voltage of pins 2 and 6 up which starts a timing interval which sends a voltage out of pin 3? And then when the capacitor is empty the voltage over 2 and 6 falls back down it stops at which point pin 3's output stops?
What are the 22 and 220 resistors for?
Sorry for the wall of ignorance I think this would be so much easier if i had someone in person to talk to : /
I've been trying to teach myself electronics as a hobby from various books and online tutorials however Im having a hard time almost as soon as i start. I have a fair understanding of components and what they do but when I try to use that info to construct basic circuits it seems to fall apart - the guides and schematics that I try to learn from just slap loads of components in with no explanation of why they are there or how the current is supposed to be flowing.
Example - I thought id try using a 555 timer to make a continuous led flasher. I found lots of diagrams for this kind of circuit but they all keep showing the pins in weird configurations. - Are you meant to just ignore where they have physically drawn them and just trust the numbers?
Also - doesnt current flow from negative to positive? Lots of diagrams i see like this one seem to suggest the opposite
https://www.google.co.uk/imgres?img...73RAhUlCsAKHfGsArQQMwgcKAAwAA&iact=mrc&uact=8
AND - in that diagram, im sure its supposed to flash the two leds alternately but i can only see how they could both be on at the same time - if pin 3 provides an additional current to allow it to push past the resistance of the second resistor and led then surely both would turn on at the same time?
When pin 3 is not providing an output voltage can current pass in the opposite direction? Allowing a circuit to be completed for just the 1st led and not the second?
Using these explanations of what each pin does https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/555_timer_IC I tried to follow what was going on on the left side of the diagram, bascially every pin except 3 and i just get lost each time..
Pin 8 is taking in the voltage from the supply (but also sometimes 3 is taking a lesser voltage in as well?)
Pin 4 - the reset, no idea
Pin 7 - discharge, "may discharge a capacitor between intervals" i can see a capacitor but i cant see how that pin discharges the capacitor or what defines when it does so.
Pin 6 - threshold, "timing interval ends when the voltage is greater than 2 thirds the ctrl" (ctrl pin is 5 - doesnt even seem to be in use) - also, even if 5 was in use - i assume its the capacitor discharging that would change the voltage going into pin 6? but in this diagram it suggests that the current is flowing in the other direction (away from 6 toward 1)
Pin 2 - trigger "timing interval starts when voltage drops below half the ctrl (again, there is no ctrl?!?!)
Pin 1 - ground reference voltage - is this acting as the ctrl? If so whats the point in pin 5?
So - as far as i can tell, the capacitor discharges and puts the voltage of pins 2 and 6 up which starts a timing interval which sends a voltage out of pin 3? And then when the capacitor is empty the voltage over 2 and 6 falls back down it stops at which point pin 3's output stops?
What are the 22 and 220 resistors for?
Sorry for the wall of ignorance I think this would be so much easier if i had someone in person to talk to : /