Okay, so I’ve been messing around with electronics for a while, and I finally decided to tackle MOSFETs. I mean, I’ve seen them everywhere in circuit diagrams, but I never really got them, you know? So, I started with the basics: the schematic symbol. It’s kinda like learning the alphabet before you can read, right?

Figuring Out the Symbols
First, I looked it up. I needed to know what I was even looking at. Turns out, there are a few different types of MOSFETs, and the symbols vary slightly. The main ones I focused on were:
- Enhancement-mode MOSFETs: These are the “normally off” kind. You need to apply a voltage to the gate to turn them on.
- Depletion-mode MOSFETs: These are “normally on,” and you need a voltage to turn them off. Not as common, but good to know.
- And Both have N-Channel, and P-Channel.
I spent a good chunk of time just staring at the different symbols. I’m a visual learner, so I needed to see it to understand it. The main difference between the enhancement and depletion types is a broken line versus a solid line for the channel. N-channel and P-channel? That’s all about the direction of the little arrow.
Drawing the Damn Things
Next, I started drawing them. Over and over. Seriously, my notebook is filled with these little symbols now. It sounds dumb, but it really helped me memorize them. I’d draw an N-channel enhancement-mode MOSFET, then a P-channel, then a depletion-mode… you get the idea. Muscle memory, baby!
I started by just trying to get the basic shapes right. The gate, the source, the drain… and that all-important channel line. I messed up a bunch at first, drawing the arrow the wrong way or forgetting the substrate connection. But, hey, that’s how you learn, right? Erase, redraw, repeat.
Connecting it to Reality
Once I felt kinda confident with the symbols, I started looking at actual circuit diagrams that used MOSFETs. It was like, “Okay, I recognize that symbol! Now, what the heck is it doing in this circuit?”

I started to see how the different types were used in different situations. Like, how an N-channel enhancement-mode MOSFET might be used as a low-side switch, and a P-channel as a high-side switch. It started to click, slowly but surely.
Putting it All Together
Finally, I decided to build a super simple circuit with a MOSFET. Just a basic switching circuit, nothing fancy. I grabbed an N-channel enhancement-mode MOSFET, a resistor, an LED, and a power supply. I drew out the schematic first, of course, using the symbol I’d been practicing. Then, I breadboarded the whole thing.
And guess what? It worked! The LED lit up when I applied a voltage to the gate. I know, it’s a tiny victory, but it felt HUGE. It was like, “I understand this symbol, I drew it, and now I’m using it to control something!”
So, yeah, that’s my MOSFET symbol journey. From total confusion to a little bit of understanding. I’ve still got a long way to go, but now I at least know what those squiggly lines mean on a schematic. And that’s a pretty good start.
