The revised edition of the Newnes Dictionary of Electronics includes a substantial new section devoted to acronyms and abbreviations. So if you think you know the meaning of ADDER, LAP, FIB, SPICE or WORM, we recommend you check in the Newnes Dictionary of Electronics first.
Newnes Dictionary of Electronics
โ Scribed by Amos, S.W.; Amos R.S.
- Publisher
- Elsevier
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 405
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Provides clear and concise definitions, supported by numerous illustrations and circuit diagrams. Ideal for engineers, technicians, students or interested amateurs, with TV, radio and computing terms all being included.
- A concise glossary for electronics, TV, radio and computing
- Ideal for engineers, students and enthusiasts
- Includes a handy appendix of acronyms
โฆ Table of Contents
Content:
Front Matter
Preface to First Edition
Preface to Second Edition
Preface to Fourth Edition
Table of Contents
A Battery to Azimuth
Background Noise to Byte
C and C++ to Cylinder
D-Type Connector to Dynode
Earphone to Extrinsic Semiconductor
Facsimile to Fuse
Gain to Gunn-Effect Diode
Hacking to Hysteresis Losses
Icon to Iterative Impedence
Jack to Junction Transistor
Keep-Alive Electrode to K Rating
Ladder Network to Lumped Circuit Constant
Machine Code or Machine Language to Mutual Inductance
NAND Gate (NOT-AND Gate) to Nyquist Diagram
Object to Overtone
Packet to Push-Pull Operation
Q Factor to Quiet Automatic Gain Control (QAGC)
Radio (Radio Direction and Ranging) to Rumble
Saddle Coils to System
Tachogenerator to Two-Terminal-Pair Network
Ultra-Linear Amplification to Utility
Vacuum Tube to VU Meter
Wafer to Writing Speed
X Amplifier to X Rays
Y Amplifier to Y Signal
Zener Breakdown to Z Parameters
Appendix: Electronics Abbreviations and Acronyms
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The revised edition of the Newnes Dictionary of Electronics includes a substantial new section devoted to acronyms and abbreviations. So if you think you know the meaning of ADDER, LAP, FIB, SPICE or WORM, we recommend you check in the Newnes Dictionary of Electronics first.
This ''toolkit'' presents facts, formuale, data and charts to help the engineer when designing, developing, evaluating, fault finding and repairing electronic circuits. The aim is for this handbook to act as a memory aid, tutor and reference source for electronics engineers, students and technicians
Included in this fully revised classic are well over 28,000 terms, phrases, acronyms, and abbreviations from the ever-expanding worlds of consumer electronics, optics, microelectronics, computers, communications, and medical electronics. From the basic elements of theory to the most cutting-edge cir
Included in this fully revised classic are well over 28,000 terms, phrases, acronyms, and abbreviations from the ever-expanding worlds of consumer electronics, optics, microelectronics, computers, communications, and medical electronics. From the basic elements of theory to the most cutting-edge cir