AngiePittman wrote: Sat Aug 19, 2023 12:37 am
Haha, your enthusiasm is infectious! It's great to hear that this program has sparked your interest in electronics. Starting with circuits without the need for a fire extinguisher sounds like a win-win. Remember, everyone starts somewhere, and you might just surprise yourself with your circuit-building skills. Keep exploring and having fun with it!
Alas, I have always been
mechanically-minded. I can fix nearly anything mechanical, if it is broken, or needs to be assembled, or modified, or even invented from scratch. I move slowly these days, but I do have several projects in various stages of completion lying around my shops, waiting for me to get motivated to finish them.
Electronics ... They escape me completely. I cannot wrap my head around electrical impulses coursing through the circuitry, and changing into this or that depending on what they pass through, so they become light, or heat, or cool air, or sound, or color, or digital readouts, or CMOS circuits for digital cameras, or X-rays, or holograms, or ... or ...
Some guys like Robert and David can LOOK at a schematic and tell you ... "This is the schematic of a 100 Watt transmitter on the (xxx) frequency band..." I see a lot of lines and scribbles, and I cannot follow a circuit if the line goes into one thing, and then there are six different exits! I know... it takes education, and dedication. I could go to WKU and study this, but I still have the ever-present handicap of a nearly non-existent memory. I can LEARN anything, but I do not RETAIN things unless I work with them on a daily basis.
For example, I paid for Fusion360 software. I began (three times) to go through the various training exercises, to draw this and that, according to the instructions designed to teach you the tools and how they work. I DREW all of them successfully, and I even began to wander off into variations on each lesson, but life got in the way, and I haven't touched the program for nearly four months. Last night, I fired it up again, to see if I could pick up where I left off. NOPE! It is as if I am looking at the software for the very first time all over again. Whatever I learned and was able to do in April is now LOST.

I live with it. this is
why I work with DesignEdge almost every day. So I don't FORGET how to use it!
When I park my motorcycle over the winter and hop onto it again in the Spring, I have to re-learn where all of the buttons are, what they do, and how to operate the complicated sound system with the phone sync and other features like GPS, etc. I rode it to the gas station and I had to LOOK UP how to open the locked gas filler door. There is a hidden finger switch inside of the right side glove box, but I had forgotten about it. I do not have the ability to retain information for long periods of time without constant review. I am
almost as bad as "10 Second Tom" in the movie,
50 First Dates.
Joe