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My Mini-project for college. Any electronics enthusiasts here?

Comments
  • 9
    Appreciate your wire management skills.
    Not sure where the source of power is or its disconnected in the picture.
  • 7
    #cablepr0n
  • 11
    You should cut the red one
  • 1
    I am! But more or less into creating PCB's and such. I dont like to work with other systems than base ten.
  • 1
    Trying to make a breadboard CPU myself. I've got a lot to learn 😯
  • 4
    So. Sexy.

    EDIT: shit I've got a girlfriend nevermind then
  • 1
    It was clock-circuit along with a timer mode that I implemented using counters and the 7-seg display.@jespersh
  • 0
    Work in progress for that one.
    Yours working fine? @Haxk20
  • 2
    Thank you!
    The power source isn't connected in the picture. @github
  • 0
    Woah! Thanks.@Condor
  • 1
    Yes. Would like her 2 cents on this. @AlexDeLarge
  • 0
    Was it based on the one by Ben Eater? @Haxk20
  • 2
    I'm not really into breadboards, but yours got at least some neat wiring. Nice project! :)
  • 2
    I'm taking a class on electrical engineering but we're only building a dice kit and nobody will explain how or why it works. Kill me.
  • 0
    Haha..
    Yes. Mostly TTL.@wolt
  • 2
    My OCD is good with this. Good job! ++
  • 2
    Now just recreate it on tinkercad. (pleace for you to create 3D models, and circuits, with arduino support.) xD
  • 1
    Will definitely try that. @Cyanite
  • 1
    Very nice cable management.
  • 0
    @px06 Thank you!
  • 0
    Thank you!
  • 0
    That’s a pretty cool mini project! College projects are always a great chance to dive into hands-on work with electronics. Whether you’re building a simple circuit or designing something more complex, it’s important to have reliable components and tech support when things go wrong. Sometimes appliances or gadgets you’re working with can throw curveballs. I’ve had a few moments where I needed help with tech issues, and finding the best lg electronics phone number https://lg-electronics.pissedconsumer.com/... was super helpful when I ran into problems. Anyone else here working on a project with some interesting electronics? How did you troubleshoot tricky issues?
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