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Bread Board 1

The document describes a breadboard trainer used for building circuits. It consists of a central breadboard section made of plastic with rows of small holes connected internally in vertical or horizontal strips. This allows components to be connected by pushing their leads into the holes. The trainer also has a built-in power supply of +5V, +12V, and -12V that is not connected internally so external wires must be used to incorporate it into test circuits. Figures 1, 2, and 3 show diagrams and photos of the logic trainer and its breadboard.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
59 views3 pages

Bread Board 1

The document describes a breadboard trainer used for building circuits. It consists of a central breadboard section made of plastic with rows of small holes connected internally in vertical or horizontal strips. This allows components to be connected by pushing their leads into the holes. The trainer also has a built-in power supply of +5V, +12V, and -12V that is not connected internally so external wires must be used to incorporate it into test circuits. Figures 1, 2, and 3 show diagrams and photos of the logic trainer and its breadboard.

Uploaded by

arfat_ahmad_khan
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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1. Bread-board Trainer for Building Circuits


Fig. 1 shows a diagram of an A- TEK laboratory "trainer", on which you will construct Circuits
(and which you will use in many other laboratory classes throughout the electrical engineering
course). The most important part of the trainer is the central "bread-board" section, which
consists of white, insulating plastic, with rows of small holes, indicated diagrammatically by the
dotted lines. Inside each hole there is a connector, which makes good electrical contact with any
lead that is pushed into it. Note that the direction of the dotted lines in the diagram indicates
permanent, internal electrical connection between the holes. Thus, the sets of five holes in the
broad strips are connected together vertically, while the two rows in the top, middle and bottom
sections are connected horizontally (but note the gaps in the middle).

The trainer has a built-in power supply, for +5 V, +12 V, and -12 V and a number of other
features designed for digital work (ignore these in this experiment). None of these features is
connected to the bread-board internally, so, unless you connect external wires to them, they will
have no effect on your test circuits.

Fig. 1 Laboratory Logic Trainer

Figure 2 and 3 show the actual Logic trainer and its Bread-bard
)

Fig. 3: Bread-board on the Logic Trainer

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