Skip forward more than 10 years, and my brother-in-law sends me a link to download several Make Magizine books. For the previous year, a growing desire for creating/making electronics had started to arise inside me again. Perhaps, it was due to my children finally getting old enough to understand and enjoy working on harder, time-consuming, and attention-consuming projects. In any case, after downloading the books and devouring them, I decided that I really wanted to regrow the skill of being able to make cool electronic circuits. After reading through Make: Zero to Maker by David Lang, I realized that the "maker" bug had never really left me. Also, that many of his struggles did not really apply to me and moreover, most of his suggested "maker" traits were ones that I had always had...but for the past 10 years I had simply applied them toward other project, primarily in woodworking.
Sadly, through lack of practice, I have lost much of my electrical engineering-specific skills. However, so much has changed. Microcontrollers, like the Arduino and now much more easily available than they were when I was in university. Raspberry Pi, laser cutters, CNC machines, 3D printing, and more! All these were no longer only available at the high-end corporations.
While the books that I read were inspiring, I must also face reality: I no longer live in the US were such tech parts are so readily available. I live on the edge of the jungles of Ecuador. However, I searched and asked and eventually found a decent electronics shop. The owner is an electronics teacher at one of the nearby high schools. I am also starting to keep my eyes open for scraped electronics boards; there are several audio and TV shops that simply trash the spare parts...however, many of these shops know what they are doing and scavenge off the quality parts before it goes to the street...nevertheless, I'm keeping my eyes open from now on.
After all this, probably my most toughest choice is deciding what to make. I think that I would like to start simple so that I children can participate with me and eventually aid in future design decisions. Perhaps, I should order a few kits...though it may take several weeks for them to arrive from the States, still, it may be nice to have something to start.
...now to clear off my table and make it ready for tinkering!
Enjoy!
Enjoy!