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Decade Counter
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Decade Counter
Hello gang,
Just messing around and made this decade counter. It's made via a 7490 (look up 74ls90). As you can see it counts up to 9 (1 section), then to 99 with the cascade. Of course it can count higher with more 7490's cascaded. Hope someone can use the 7490's for something cool.
Have fun, BobF.....
P.S., thanks to Trogluddite for modules used!
- BobF
- Posts: 598
- Joined: Mon Apr 20, 2015 9:54 pm
Re: Decade Counter
Nicely done Bob!
It takes me back to the old days when I used to design test equipment in the labs at BSR for use on the production lines (they mainly made record player decks).
Those halcyon days were a heady mix of TTL and CMOS logic with a lot of analogue op-amps and transistors thrown in for good measure. The CMOS and TTL Cookbooks were well thumbed!
These kind of projects you come up with could provide really good teaching aids for young’uns.
Cheers
Spogg
It takes me back to the old days when I used to design test equipment in the labs at BSR for use on the production lines (they mainly made record player decks).
Those halcyon days were a heady mix of TTL and CMOS logic with a lot of analogue op-amps and transistors thrown in for good measure. The CMOS and TTL Cookbooks were well thumbed!
These kind of projects you come up with could provide really good teaching aids for young’uns.
Cheers
Spogg
-
Spogg - Posts: 3358
- Joined: Thu Nov 20, 2014 4:24 pm
- Location: Birmingham, England
Re: Decade Counter
Another nostalgia thread for us old 'uns?! (Thus making "Decade Counter" a doubly apt title! )
There was a time when I could have recalled dozens of TTL/CMOS chip codes from memory - back in the days when building DIY gadgets for my computer meant cobbling together hardware address decoders from logic chips on Veroboard rather than blasting code down a USB cable into a micro-controller. Lovely to see those old 7-seg display being used, too - though I'm sure that someone in the past has gone one better and done Nixie tubes!
You might be surprised to learn that real 74-series chips are still used for teaching young 'uns. Until only a few years ago, I was responsible for this range of educational products for schools. They use proper old-school through-hole chips in DIL sockets, too - nice and easy to fix for the school lab technician (another of my former occupations) when the little darlings decide to investigate the "magic smoke", as they inevitably do!
There was a time when I could have recalled dozens of TTL/CMOS chip codes from memory - back in the days when building DIY gadgets for my computer meant cobbling together hardware address decoders from logic chips on Veroboard rather than blasting code down a USB cable into a micro-controller. Lovely to see those old 7-seg display being used, too - though I'm sure that someone in the past has gone one better and done Nixie tubes!
Spogg wrote:These kind of projects you come up with could provide really good teaching aids for young’uns.
You might be surprised to learn that real 74-series chips are still used for teaching young 'uns. Until only a few years ago, I was responsible for this range of educational products for schools. They use proper old-school through-hole chips in DIL sockets, too - nice and easy to fix for the school lab technician (another of my former occupations) when the little darlings decide to investigate the "magic smoke", as they inevitably do!
All schematics/modules I post are free for all to use - but a credit is always polite!
Don't stagnate, mutate to create!
Don't stagnate, mutate to create!
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trogluddite - Posts: 1730
- Joined: Fri Oct 22, 2010 12:46 am
- Location: Yorkshire, UK
Re: Decade Counter
trogluddite wrote: ... though I'm sure that someone in the past has gone one better...
Ask and ye shall receive!
- Attachments
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- Nixie.fsm
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Spogg - Posts: 3358
- Joined: Thu Nov 20, 2014 4:24 pm
- Location: Birmingham, England
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