Your favorite/most used reference books?

J

Jim

Guest
I've kept all of my various text books throughout college, and now I'm doing
more research into good reference books. (In the field of Electronics/
Electrical Engineering)
I'm curious as to what peoples favorite/most used reference books are and if
you recommend them or have recommendations.

Thanks,
Jim
 
On Thu, 23 Oct 2003 10:43:09 -0400, "Jim" <gt0975b@prism.gatech.edu>
wrote:

I've kept all of my various text books throughout college, and now I'm doing
more research into good reference books. (In the field of Electronics/
Electrical Engineering)
I'm curious as to what peoples favorite/most used reference books are and if
you recommend them or have recommendations.

Thanks,
Jim

Reference Data for Radio Engineers. Old ones are cheap and just as
good.

CRC Handbook of Physics and Chemistry. Ditto.

TI's original (1981) TTL Data Book for Design Engineers (for pinouts)

Agilent's Appcad program; not a book, but handy and free!


John

John
 
"John Larkin" <jjlarkin@highlandSNIPtechTHISnologyPLEASE.com> wrote in
message news:s9tfpv4vud691fnhpnsr4oauhr3sg1feub@4ax.com...
Reference Data for Radio Engineers. Old ones are cheap and just as
good.

CRC Handbook of Physics and Chemistry. Ditto.

TI's original (1981) TTL Data Book for Design Engineers (for pinouts)

Agilent's Appcad program; not a book, but handy and free!


John

Would my 1974 Texas Instruments TTL Data Book be "more original"? :)
 
Reference Data for Radio Engineers. Old ones are cheap and just as
good.

CRC Handbook of Physics and Chemistry. Ditto.

TI's original (1981) TTL Data Book for Design Engineers (for pinouts)

Agilent's Appcad program; not a book, but handy and free!
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Where do you get this?
I searched on their website for a few minutes, but was unable to turn up
anything.
Thanks for the suggestions, I'd really like to hear some more.

Jim
 
On Fri, 24 Oct 2003 12:56:28 -0400, "Jim" <gt0975b@prism.gatech.edu>
wrote:

Reference Data for Radio Engineers. Old ones are cheap and just as
good.

CRC Handbook of Physics and Chemistry. Ditto.

TI's original (1981) TTL Data Book for Design Engineers (for pinouts)

Agilent's Appcad program; not a book, but handy and free!
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Where do you get this?
I searched on their website for a few minutes, but was unable to turn up
anything.
Thanks for the suggestions, I'd really like to hear some more.

Jim
Well, if you google "appcad download" you get

http://www.semiconductor.agilent.com/cgi-bin/morpheus/wirelessDesignTool/utility.jsp?flag=App


John
 
On Thu, 23 Oct 2003 10:43:09 -0400, "Jim" <gt0975b@prism.gatech.edu>
wrote:

I've kept all of my various text books throughout college, and now I'm doing
more research into good reference books. (In the field of Electronics/
Electrical Engineering)
I'm curious as to what peoples favorite/most used reference books are and if
you recommend them or have recommendations.
CRC Mathematics handbook

McGraw Hill Handbook of Physical Calculations (1976)

Kevin
 
In article <bn8pdt$3oq$1@news-int2.gatech.edu>,
gt0975b@prism.gatech.edu mentioned...
I've kept all of my various text books throughout college, and now I'm doing
more research into good reference books. (In the field of Electronics/
Electrical Engineering)
I'm curious as to what peoples favorite/most used reference books are and if
you recommend them or have recommendations.

Thanks,
Jim
Handbook of Electronic Tables and Formulas by Sams. I have two
editions, the fourth and fifth. get the latest you can get. See my
..sig for used books.

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