Selected Product: | Principles of Electronic Instrumentation (Saunders Golden Sunburst Series) Paperback Edition: 3rd Author: James A. Diefendefer, Brian Holton Publisher: Saunders College Pub. Release Date: 1994-01-02 ISBN-10: 0030747090 ISBN-13: 9780030747090 List Price: $188.95 Average Customer Rating: | | The Art of Electronics ISBN-10: 0521370957 ISBN-13: 9780521370950 List Price:$102.00 Introduction to Quantum Mechanics (2nd Edition) ISBN-10: 0131118927 ISBN-13: 9780131118928 List Price:$128.00 Introduction to Electrodynamics (3rd Edition) ISBN-10: 013805326X ISBN-13: 9780138053260 List Price:$134.00 Classical Mechanics ISBN-10: 189138922X ISBN-13: 9781891389221 List Price:$94.50 Mathematical Methods in the Physical Sciences ISBN-10: 0471198269 ISBN-13: 9780471198260 List Price:$96.19 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Principles of Electronic Instrumentation (Saunders Golden Sunburst Series) by James A. Diefendefer, Brian Holton (ISBN-10: 0030747090, ISBN-13: 9780030747090). At this time we have not yet written a review for Principles of Electronic Instrumentation (Saunders Golden Sunburst Series) by James A. Diefendefer, Brian Holton (ISBN-10: 0030747090, ISBN-13: 9780030747090). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com This student-oriented text familiarizes undergraduates with the electronics involved in scientific instrumentation and control systems for use in research and end products. Suitable for the one- or two-semester courses, the text emphasizes electronics applications, rather than the physics or engineering of a device. This makes the material suitable for students who need a fundamental knowledge of electronics for the laboratory or workplace. Manufacturers' data sheets for nearly every common component are gathered in a convenient appendix, making learning and applications much easier and providing students with a valuable reference tool. Do not buy this book! | Customer Rating: | | Used this as the textbook for our basic college electronics course. It is riddled with major mistakes that made it impossible to trust any information. It is impossible to do many of the exercises without extensive knowledge not found in the book. The explanations are often difficult to follow. Definitely not for the novice. I would stay away from this book! | a very good book | Customer Rating: | I'm not sure why there are so many poor reviews of this book. I used the 2nd edition years ago and liked it - this 3rd edition continues to be very good.
It's approach is simple, clear & direct. The math is mostly algebra & trigonometry based with a bit of calculus thrown in here and there. This makes it very approachable especially if you don't have much experience with electronics. It's much clearer than Brophy ever was and more detailed than Faissler's book (Introduction to Modern Electronics).
I find many university level intro electronics books don't give enough motivation i.e. how you actually use the stuff. Electronics is, after all, an intensely PRACTICAL subject. This book throughout shows you where and how it relates to scientific applications. Chapter 7 on transducers and chapter 15 on noise are good intros to these areas in this regard.
dislikes: 30% (170/577 pages) of book is devoted to datasheets. Why I don't know. In every intro electronics course I've seen datasheets are rarely used. And just how likely is it that you'll need the ones in this book? - usually you'll need sheets for some oddball component in the lab portion of a course. These pages are a waste and should have been devoted to something else.
It should also have had end-of-chapter references for more advanced books. Glossary would have been nice too.
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if you want a more rigorous intro book use "Principles of Electronics: Analog and Digital" by Lloyd R. Fortney.
If you want more info on transducers, practical building and noise reduction techniques look at 1) "Electronics and Instrumentation for Scientists" by Malmstadt/Enke/Crouch, 2) "Measurement and Instrumentation Principles" 3rd Edition by Alan S. Morris, 3) "Signal Recovery from Noise in Electronic Instrumentation" by T.H. Wilmshurst, 4) "Electronic Instrument Handbook" by Clyde F. Coombs and 5) "Building Scientific Apparatus" by Moore/Davis/Coplan | A little pricey | Customer Rating: | | The book seems poorly edited, the presentation of the basic material is too short (a large portion of this book is data sheets), much of the mateial in the exercises at the ends of the chapters is not discussed in the text, and there ar no solutions provided. On the other hand, the book does some good in its short and to-the-point explanations of some basic to intemediate ideas in modern electronics, and it is up-to-date. I would not reccomend this book for self study, but it should work fairly well for an introductory course at the undergraduate level- as long as the instructor covers the material left out of the book. | Good as a Reference, Bad as a Teacher | Customer Rating: | | I haven't tackled many of the problems, so I can't speak to the overabundance of typos that everybody else is complaining about, nor the quality of selection of the problems. I can say that this book presents a very organized review of a wide range of well-chosen topics. If you already have a decent understanding, it's an excellent reference. However, I find that whenever I come across a topic in which I need instruction right from the beginning, this book is almost always way too terse to be of any use. | Confusing | Customer Rating: | | The way in which some of the sections are presented is much more complicated than they have to be in this book. It also has a tendency to give you problems that it hasn't taught in the section, expecting you to understand the concept from the limited information in the question. The only thing I really like about this book is that all the answers are in the back, not just the even or the odd. |
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