MillenniumFalsehood wrote:Nothing ever works! Gah! It's like I've got a black thumb or something . . .
I know I'm a little late here but I wanted to add that it wasn't that long ago I felt the same way. Actually I was worse, I don't think I could solder two wires together without creating a mess at best, and a fire hazard at worst.
But I'm much better now.
So a few suggestions based on what helped me improve...
1. Pickup a solderless breadboard. Use it to build the circuit _before_ you solder anything. You can make plenty of mistakes along the way and it's usually no harm, no foul.
Plus you'll end up with a working version you can compare the actual soldered version with. Really helps to determine problems when you can compare trace for trace and pin for pin.
2. Buy two of every critical part, so you always have a spare to swap just to eliminate a simple part failure. It does happen, but usually it's you.
Plus it allows you to leave the breadboarded version of your circuit alone while you solder up your masterpiece. Heck, I usually get 3 just to have a backup for my backup, but then again I do have issues.
3. Get (and use) a multi-meter. Even a Harbor Freight el-cheapo if that's all you can afford (but better is better as always). Learn how to use it to test voltages and continuity.
Use the meter to test continuity between your connections. That's often more useful than being able to check voltages. Verify that the output of the power pin matches the power input on the 555 timer.
This is the easiest tool to actually solve problems with a soldered board.
It's really easy to mis-wire a chip looking at a diagram that's upside down or placed differently on the board.
I think this is the "go to" tool that has never let me down (unlike my brain).
4. What have the Romans ever done for us?
Ok, I guess that's it. I hope this is of some help.
Regards,
Brad.