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Electronics Kits for Kids (and Adults)?

blkros asks: "Christmas is coming up, and , I've been thinking about stuff for the kids. I want to get them intersted in technology (other than gameboy and pokemon), and was thinking about the old Heathkit company, and how I used to drool over their catalog as a kid. (Yes, I'm that old <grin!>)Of course they don't sell kits anymore, so I did a web search,and found a bunch of companys that sell kits, eg Ramsey Electronics. My questions are does anyone have experience with any of the companies? Who sells the best? Who's the least expensive?"

4 of 28 comments (clear)

  1. Solar Bug kits from Andy Pang.. by slashkitty · · Score: 3, Informative
    I just got this kit in the mail today. B.E.A.M Solar Robot Kits. Interesting things to do with transistors, motors, solar cells and a few other parts. This guy put together a few kits from surplus parts. They all around $10.

    Other sites have put together other BEAM kits that are more expensive. SolarBotics seems to have a lot of stuff listed.

    Now I gotta go do some sodering!

    --
    -- these are only opinions and they might not be mine.
  2. Kit sources by rsargent · · Score: 2, Informative
    Jameco electronics (www.jameco.com) and Robot Store (www.robotstore.com) are both sources of some fun kits.

    Radio kits just aren't as compelling as they were 30 years ago when I was that age. Today I think robotic kits are particularly compelling, and some even provide a jumping-off point for learning to program.

    On a related note, I was also bitten by the LEGO bug as a youngster, and probably spent an order of magnitude more time building with LEGO than I spent building electronics kits. Something to consider...

  3. Ten-Tec, Ramsey, Nuts & Volts and Ratshack by Ratbert42 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Ten-Tec has some decent radio kits. For $24 you can get the 1054 which is a stripped-down regen shortwave receiver. For $69 you can get the 1253 which is a complete regen receiver. Either will provide decent listening to both ham and shortwave broadcast stations.

    Ramsey kits are ok, but you need to read carefully. For example, they advertise kits like the SR2 with a photo of it in a case. The case is a $14.95 option and you still don't get a speaker.

    As for building ease, I can't really comment. The only recent kit I've built is the Ramsey SR2. It was easy but time-consuming and a bit boring, as I've soldered thousands of components in my time.

    Nuts & Volts magazine is a good source of ads for kits.

    I'm not sure how much you can learn from one of these kits. They tend to not have much in the way of experimentation. You build the kit, play with it for an hour or two, then stash it on a shelf. If you're going to go the kit route, I would start with a simple blinking LED kit or something to learn soldering, then maybe a decent radio kit that you'll actually be able to use.

    If you want to get the kids interested, I would go to Radio Shack and dig around in the back. There you will find some dusty books from the Engineer's Mini-Notebook line ($1.99). They have easy explanations, circuit diagrams, and lots of experiments to try. They don't make it trivial to find the parts and you'll be spending quite a bit of time prowling Radio Shack parts racks, but it's worth it. The kids will get to do some of the design work themselves.

  4. 300 in 1 by Usquebaugh · · Score: 2, Informative

    Without doubt the best electronics kit I ever got was the 300 in 1 kit. No soldering just easy to connect components.

    I made all the circuits in the book and then started changing components to see what happened, oh look a change in capacitance causes the light to blink faster etc etc

    This was 20 years ago and I can still remember blowing all the leds, I wanted to make them brighter. So then I learnt how to solder and then I learnt what a diode did :-)

    Check this out, all I need is $170