Start here
Never soldered, coded, or printed anything? Perfect. Here's the exact three-step ramp from "total beginner" to "I made that."
- 1Open the channel
Watch one build, start to finish
See the whole pipeline once — sketch, blueprint, print, wire, code, test. You'll realize none of the individual steps are magic.
- 2Grab the free planner
Print the Gadget Project Planner
One free page that turns a fuzzy idea into a buildable plan: sketch box, parts list, steps, and a "what could go wrong" corner.
- 3See the Door Guard plan
Do the zero-solder first build
The Door Guard 3000 is all breadboard — no soldering, parts under $20, one weekend. It's the perfect first gadget.
that's it. three steps. the fourth step is showing everyone what you built.
Beginner FAQ
Before you ask
What should a beginner buy first for Arduino projects?+
A starter kit with an Arduino Uno (or clone), a breadboard, jumper wires, LEDs, and resistors covers the first five projects. Skip the 3D printer until you're hooked — printed parts are the upgrade, not the starting line.
Do I need to know how to code?+
No. First builds use small example programs you can copy, run, and then poke at. Changing one number and seeing what happens is genuinely how everyone learns.
How old do you need to be to start building electronics?+
If you can follow a LEGO manual, you can breadboard. Low-voltage stuff like Arduino is beginner-safe; the rule on this channel is simple — anything hot, sharp, or battery-related gets an adult involved.
Free stuff, straight to you
Get the beginner pack
The planner, the toolkit checklist, and the wiring cheat sheet — plus a ping when beginner builds drop.