R1C1R2C2: The Two-Pole Passive RC Filter
Jason Sachs walks through the math and simulation for the common two-pole passive RC filter, turning repetitive algebra into a compact reference you can reuse. He derives the closed-form transfer function, extracts the natural frequency and damping ratio, and explains why the topology cannot be underdamped without inductors or active stages. The post finishes with a state-space simulation recipe and practical component guidance.
The Other Kind of Bypass Capacitor
Most engineers treat bypass capacitors as supply decoupling, but Jason Sachs digs into the other kind: a capacitor placed in the feedback path to tame unpredictable high-frequency plant behavior. He walks through real examples, Bode plots, and a simple RC model to show how the cap forces unity-gain feedback at high frequency, stabilizing switching regulators and wideband amplifiers while revealing the speed versus stability tradeoff.
How to Read a Power MOSFET Datasheet
Jason Sachs takes a soapbox to stop a recurring mistake: misreading power MOSFET datasheets. This practical guide separates marketing blurbs and typical graphs from the specifications you can actually rely on, and explains how to use RDS(on), VGS, gate charge, SOA and thermal data in real designs. Read this before you pick a MOSFET or size a gate driver.
Two Capacitors Are Better Than One
Jason Sachs revisits a simple stacked RC trick that dramatically reduces DC error from capacitor insulation leakage in long time-constant filters. Splitting one RC into two stages forces most of the DC drop onto the lower capacitor, squaring the remaining error while changing the effective pole locations. The post walks through the math, practical component tradeoffs, and when to prefer a digital approach.
Voltage Drops Are Falling on My Head: Operating Points, Linearization, Temperature Coefficients, and Thermal Runaway
A lot of the neat, tidy diode and transistor rules you learned in school are really just approximations. Jason Sachs shows how operating points, linearization, and temperature coefficients give you a better mental model for real circuits, then uses that framework to explain why thermal runaway happens. Along the way, he connects the theory to practical device behavior, op-amp output stages, and the design tricks that keep parts from letting out the magic smoke.
Optimizing Optoisolators, and Other Stories of Making Do With Less
Jason Sachs digs into how to squeeze speed and reliability from low-cost optoisolators, showing practical tweaks that often outperform default datasheet usage. He mixes hands-on circuits — using 4N35 base-emitter resistors, Schottky clamps, input speedup caps, and output buffering — with transistor-switching theory and a cautionary production story to show when to optimize and when to splurge on pricier isolators.
Someday We’ll Find It, The Kelvin Connection
Low-ohm measurements will fool your multimeter unless you use Kelvin connections. Jason Sachs walks through four-wire sensing using a current-limited supply and two DMMs, explains thermoelectric and connector-related errors, and shows why schematics and PCB layout must reflect Kelvin sense pads to avoid subtle measurement and circuit problems.
Lost Secrets of the H-Bridge, Part IV: DC Link Decoupling and Why Electrolytic Capacitors Are Not Enough
Switching H-bridges can kick nasty voltage spikes onto the DC link, and a single electrolytic capacitor rarely fixes the problem. Jason Sachs uses simulations and practical PCB layout advice to show how a three-tier decoupling strategy — bulk electrolytic, mid-value ceramics or film, and many small HF bypass capacitors plus PCB plane capacitance — tames spikes, reduces EMI, and avoids harmful resonances when parts and vias are placed correctly.
How to Analyze a Differential Amplifier
Jason Sachs walks through the algebra and intuition behind the classic four-resistor differential amplifier. He derives the exact output equation, isolates error terms from resistor mismatch and op-amp imperfections, and explains why common-mode gain depends on mismatch not on the differential gain. Read this for clear formulas, modal insight into common-mode versus differential-mode, and practical steps to reduce offsets in real designs.
Another 10 Circuit Components You Should Know
Jason Sachs walks through ten underrated circuit components every embedded engineer should know, from bus switches and thermocouple signal ICs to PCB stiffeners and opto-FET isolators. He mixes practical part examples, high-current hardware tips, and MCU features like CTMU and Peripheral Pin Select so you can pick the right trick when space, isolation, or precision matter.
Analog-to-Digital Confusion: Pitfalls of Driving an ADC
Wayne's thermistor board showed one ADC channel changing when another was heated, a classic case of ADC input cross-coupling. The post walks through how multiplexed ADCs, the small sample-and-hold capacitor, source impedance, sampling time, repeated sampling rates, and added charge reservoirs interact to create errors. Learn practical fixes including increasing sample time, sizing external caps, adding op-amp buffers, and using an RC dampener with PCB layout tips.
Modeling Gate Drive Diodes
This is a short article about how to analyze the diode in some gate drive circuits when figuring out turn-off characteristics --- specifically, determining the relationship between gate drive current and gate voltage during turn-off of a power transistor.
Turn It On Again: Modeling Power MOSFET Turn-On Dependence on Source Inductance
This is a short article explaining how to analyze part of the behavior of a power MOSFET during turn-on, and how it is influenced by the parasitic inductance at the source terminal. The brief qualitative reason that source inductance is undesirable is that it uses up voltage when current starts increasing during turn-on (remember, V = L dI/dt), voltage that would otherwise be available to turn the transistor on faster. But I want to show a quantitative approximation to understand the impact of additional source inductance, and I want to compare it to the effects of extra inductance at the gate or drain.
The Least Interesting Circuit in the World
Jason Sachs pulls apart the humble power-on reset and shows why the common RC-and-Schmitt trick is the least interesting but most dangerous circuit in your design. He walks through voltage thresholds, brown-out reset behavior, and how slow or noisy Vdd ramps can let parts start in indeterminate states. Read this for practical rules on choosing supervisors, comparators, and reset pulse timing to ensure reliable embedded startup.
Optimizing Optoisolators, and Other Stories of Making Do With Less
Jason Sachs digs into how to squeeze speed and reliability from low-cost optoisolators, showing practical tweaks that often outperform default datasheet usage. He mixes hands-on circuits — using 4N35 base-emitter resistors, Schottky clamps, input speedup caps, and output buffering — with transistor-switching theory and a cautionary production story to show when to optimize and when to splurge on pricier isolators.
Getting smacked by the long tail of poor design habits
Bad design choices in embedded products have a habit of coming back years later and biting the people who made them. Drawing on decades of consulting and product support, the author reflects on version control, part selection, comments, manuals, and usability choices that seemed harmless at the time but became costly in the field.
The Other Kind of Bypass Capacitor
Most engineers treat bypass capacitors as supply decoupling, but Jason Sachs digs into the other kind: a capacitor placed in the feedback path to tame unpredictable high-frequency plant behavior. He walks through real examples, Bode plots, and a simple RC model to show how the cap forces unity-gain feedback at high frequency, stabilizing switching regulators and wideband amplifiers while revealing the speed versus stability tradeoff.
Another 10 Circuit Components You Should Know
Jason Sachs walks through ten underrated circuit components every embedded engineer should know, from bus switches and thermocouple signal ICs to PCB stiffeners and opto-FET isolators. He mixes practical part examples, high-current hardware tips, and MCU features like CTMU and Peripheral Pin Select so you can pick the right trick when space, isolation, or precision matter.
Voltage Drops Are Falling on My Head: Operating Points, Linearization, Temperature Coefficients, and Thermal Runaway
A lot of the neat, tidy diode and transistor rules you learned in school are really just approximations. Jason Sachs shows how operating points, linearization, and temperature coefficients give you a better mental model for real circuits, then uses that framework to explain why thermal runaway happens. Along the way, he connects the theory to practical device behavior, op-amp output stages, and the design tricks that keep parts from letting out the magic smoke.
Two Capacitors Are Better Than One
Jason Sachs revisits a simple stacked RC trick that dramatically reduces DC error from capacitor insulation leakage in long time-constant filters. Splitting one RC into two stages forces most of the DC drop onto the lower capacitor, squaring the remaining error while changing the effective pole locations. The post walks through the math, practical component tradeoffs, and when to prefer a digital approach.
Byte and Switch (Part 2)
Running a thermistor front end from a single AA cell exposes problems you might not expect. Jason Sachs walks through a switchable-gain divider using a P-channel MOSFET and shows how MOSFET off-state leakage and low supply voltages can corrupt high-impedance temperature readings. The post compares bipolar transistors and analog switch ICs as fixes and gives practical component guidance for one-cell designs.
Two Capacitors Are Better Than One
Jason Sachs revisits a simple stacked RC trick that dramatically reduces DC error from capacitor insulation leakage in long time-constant filters. Splitting one RC into two stages forces most of the DC drop onto the lower capacitor, squaring the remaining error while changing the effective pole locations. The post walks through the math, practical component tradeoffs, and when to prefer a digital approach.
The Least Interesting Circuit in the World
Jason Sachs pulls apart the humble power-on reset and shows why the common RC-and-Schmitt trick is the least interesting but most dangerous circuit in your design. He walks through voltage thresholds, brown-out reset behavior, and how slow or noisy Vdd ramps can let parts start in indeterminate states. Read this for practical rules on choosing supervisors, comparators, and reset pulse timing to ensure reliable embedded startup.
The Other Kind of Bypass Capacitor
Most engineers treat bypass capacitors as supply decoupling, but Jason Sachs digs into the other kind: a capacitor placed in the feedback path to tame unpredictable high-frequency plant behavior. He walks through real examples, Bode plots, and a simple RC model to show how the cap forces unity-gain feedback at high frequency, stabilizing switching regulators and wideband amplifiers while revealing the speed versus stability tradeoff.
Another 10 Circuit Components You Should Know
Jason Sachs walks through ten underrated circuit components every embedded engineer should know, from bus switches and thermocouple signal ICs to PCB stiffeners and opto-FET isolators. He mixes practical part examples, high-current hardware tips, and MCU features like CTMU and Peripheral Pin Select so you can pick the right trick when space, isolation, or precision matter.
Someday We’ll Find It, The Kelvin Connection
Low-ohm measurements will fool your multimeter unless you use Kelvin connections. Jason Sachs walks through four-wire sensing using a current-limited supply and two DMMs, explains thermoelectric and connector-related errors, and shows why schematics and PCB layout must reflect Kelvin sense pads to avoid subtle measurement and circuit problems.
Real-time clocks: Does anybody really know what time it is?
Most RTC chips still expose calendar fields rather than seconds-since-epoch, forcing embedded engineers to write ugly conversion code. Jason Sachs makes the case for offset encoding, subseconds, and an explicit snapshot feature to simplify interval math, raise precision, and avoid rare timing bugs. Read this practical take on RTC trade-offs and a short wishlist for chip makers.
10 More (Obscure) Circuit Components You Should Know
Jason Sachs follows up his earlier primer with ten more underused but practical parts that can simplify embedded hardware designs. From MOSFET-based ideal diode controllers that eliminate diode drops to TAOS light-to-frequency sensors that expand dynamic range, the post explains what each component does, when to choose it, and real-world tradeoffs learned from field use. Ideal for engineers looking to broaden their parts toolbox.
Stairway to Thévenin
Jason Sachs strips away classroom mystique to show how Thevenin and Norton equivalents are practical tools for real embedded work. Using a simple two-terminal black-box example he shows how two measurements give Vth and Rth, then applies that model to voltage-divider references, potentiometer RC filters, and combining multiple sources with Millman's theorem. Read it for fast, practical ways to predict output impedance, droop, and filter time constants.
How to Analyze a Differential Amplifier
Jason Sachs walks through the algebra and intuition behind the classic four-resistor differential amplifier. He derives the exact output equation, isolates error terms from resistor mismatch and op-amp imperfections, and explains why common-mode gain depends on mismatch not on the differential gain. Read this for clear formulas, modal insight into common-mode versus differential-mode, and practical steps to reduce offsets in real designs.









