>> I'm going to be teaching a community college class on electronic >> troubleshooting in January. The current text is more of general >> electronic >> theory book with small sections on troubleshooting at the end of each >> chapter. Not very useful. > > Electronics troubleshooting is not so much looking for things that are > wrong, but looking for deviations from the way things should be. I > don't > know whether you can teach this directly; you either need a bunch of > knowledge about how everything is supposed to work, a boatload of > experiences about both how things work and how they are likely to > deviate, and/or an uncanny intuition... > I agree. I like teaching other classes better, but this is what I got for next semester. The Bob Pease book people suggested looks good. I'll also bring in working techs like last semester as guest speakers. So... thanks for the comments! Harold -- FCC Rules Updated Daily at http://www.hallikainen.com -- http://www.piclist.com PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist