I like them, but It seems like a waste to burn through a set of 3 AA batteries every couple of weeks, so I decide to hardwire them (as an added bonus, I'm integrating them into home assistant for remote control). My wife set up a string of cheap battery-powered copper wire LED lights in our living room. PDF: Texas Instruments Analog Engineer's Pocket Reference Handbookįull disclosure, I'm a new DIY'er, so this will come off as a pretty stupid question to most. In r/DIYElectronics we encourage a conversation about your project or question but this does not include "spamming" your question or project without any intention to interaction.īlog post: So you want to build electronics Please refrain from x-posting or posting the same thing to multiple (and this) subreddit. Sharing product links as an answer to a question is fine, but your comment might be automatically removed by the filter. No purchase links to commercial products (this includes crowdfunding) as posts. Nothing personal, but when no opt-out is given the bot will be banned. Please go to r/ElectronicsList for commercial services in electronics. Collaborations are fine, but posts about hiring will be removed. We're probably already subscribed to whatever subreddit you posted to originally. Please refrain from using the subreddit to get more visibility to your question. No links to questions posted in other subreddits. Read the announcement for more info and exceptionsĪDD FLAIR after adding your post here, please! Videos should have the "Video" link flair assigned. Regarding video submissions: Video submissions are in general not allowed. This subreddit is dedicated to both amateur and professional engineers that want to build cool stuff at home, challenge themselves to learn new technologies, learn from each others' designs, and showcase their side projects.
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