Just so long as we remember to check it'll fit the need. I recently inherited a design that used some parts from the 70s and they were not up to the task. Drop-out voltages too high, gate threshold voltages too high; whatever spec could be violated was. Just because it's been used for 50 years doesn't mean it's the right part for the job
ChuckMcM 11 hours ago [-]
This is an interesting article on how open licensing can help ensure viability long after the original designer has left the game.
frrlpp 6 hours ago [-]
BC547? 337? I think they are Texas devices, much popular too.
adrian_b 11 minutes ago [-]
Those were originally Philips devices, but like with the American JEDEC part names, after a device with an European part name, like BC337 was registered, any semiconductor device manufacturer could sell equivalent devices.
The European part numbers provided much more information than the American part numbers.
JEDEC 2Nxxxx just told you that this is some kind of transistor or thyristor, instead of being a diode like 1Nxxxx.
BC told you that this is a silicon small-power audio-frequency transistor.
There were separate codes for other materials and for many other kinds of transistors, diodes and thyristors (for example AD = germanium high-power audio-frequency transistor, BF/BL = Si low/high-power RF transistors, BS/BU = Si low/high-power switching transistors, BR/BT = Si low/high-power thyristors, BA/BY = Si low/high-power rectifiers, BB = Si varicaps, and many others).
Rendered at 07:15:50 GMT+0000 (UTC) with Wasmer Edge.
The European part numbers provided much more information than the American part numbers.
JEDEC 2Nxxxx just told you that this is some kind of transistor or thyristor, instead of being a diode like 1Nxxxx.
BC told you that this is a silicon small-power audio-frequency transistor.
There were separate codes for other materials and for many other kinds of transistors, diodes and thyristors (for example AD = germanium high-power audio-frequency transistor, BF/BL = Si low/high-power RF transistors, BS/BU = Si low/high-power switching transistors, BR/BT = Si low/high-power thyristors, BA/BY = Si low/high-power rectifiers, BB = Si varicaps, and many others).