You are using beta.rapidonline.com. For the live site go to rapidonline.com

Electronic Assembly Kits

Electronic assembly kits turn a pile of components into a working, finished thing — which makes them the most satisfying way to learn electronics and a staple of the D&T workshop, the after-school club and the hobbyist's bench alike. This range spans simple beginner soldering kits through to more advanced project builds, each supplied as a complete set of parts with instructions, so there's no assembling a components list before a project can start.

Filters

Common questions

Which kit suits a beginner?

Start with a simple soldering kit that has a handful of components and a clear circuit — a flashing LED, a small amplifier or a basic timer. These teach soldering technique and how a circuit goes together without overwhelming a first-timer, and they build the confidence to move on to kits with more parts and more capable results.

Do these kits need soldering?

Most assembly kits are soldered, which is part of their value — they teach a genuine, transferable skill. If soldering isn't practical, look for solderless kits that use breadboards or push-fit connectors instead. The product details make clear which a kit needs, so you can match it to the skills and equipment you have.

Are these suitable for class sets and clubs?

Yes. Kits are well suited to whole-class teaching and clubs because every pupil builds the same project from an identical set of parts, which keeps a lesson manageable. Class-pack quantities and education pricing bring the per-pupil cost down, and consolidating the order simplifies delivery and prep.

What else do I need alongside a kit?

For soldered kits you'll need a soldering iron and basic tools — see the soldering range — and it's worth keeping spare components for the parts most likely to be lost or damaged. Kits pair naturally with wider design and technology work and with programmable projects using single board computers.


Trustpilot