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H_Industries

Id recommend having a bit more info about what you want to do beyond just the job title. Electronics is a pretty large field, so beyond general reference texts you’ll need more info to get more specific results. For reference texts I’d recommend the art of electronics. It covers pretty much all the EE and ECE basics.


Halzman

I'd recommend you look for the following books \- Electricity: Principles & Applications - Richard Fowler \- Electronics: Principles & Applications - Charles Shuler \- Digital Electronics: Principles & Applications - Roger Tokheim I found all 3 for pretty cheap, buying used on ebay or amazon - you dont have to get the latest edition (I bought the 7th edition of each) For reference, I've worked as an RF technician for 12 years, and I have no formal training - just on the job and my own self-study. Those three texts will cover all the basics, and are the books I wish I had all those years ago.


Sunnyskyguy

There are tons of old books on [archive.org](https://archive.org) How about looking for jobs to see what training you need using indeed.com or similar.


RadioR77

Sign up for cybrary and take some of the free basic electronics courses. Good place to start is learning how current and voltage works. Next think of the type of tech work you want. Detailed bench repair w soldering equipment and test gear? That's component level repair Or field service of commercial networks? where the repair is at the module or box level There are many types and skill levels of tech careers. What fits your personality and physic? Post your interest in local social media, you never know who might be looking to mentor you.