GARTHWILSON wrote:
When you want faster parts, you could use the online data sheets just to look up the speeds, but keep this book handy for the pinouts, descriptions, truth tables, logic diagrams, logic waveforms, etc..
This is exactly what I was thinking. Having useful period app notes that I can sit down in a chair and read, instead of trying to juggle PDFs, is also a plus.
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I got these before we had the internet and manufacturers gave out their data books like AOL CD-ROMs (remember those?)
Ai! Ai! A balrog is come!
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I don't know where you would get these books today. It might be a used-book store, library sale (including from technical schools), someone retiring and getting rid of much of their stuff, etc.. You'll probably just have to keep an eye out for them. I haven't looked on eBay or Amazon.
I'm pretty decent at rustling up used books on various web-sites. I'll keep an eye out for those NSC data books. There are definitely some on eBay; but I wasn't sure if they covered 74 series or just 4000 series, because the description just said "CMOS." Now I know!
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Dave Jones of the EEVblog went kind of hard on this, saying, "Why would you keep all those old books taking up space when it's all online now."
This is not my way.
In addition to the advantages you mention, a lot of my TI printouts don't have page numbers or title headers, so when a whole stack falls off of my bench, I can't tell which pages go together, or what order they go on!