Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!cornell!rochester!ken From: ken@cs.rochester.edu (Ken Yap) Newsgroups: sci.electronics Subject: Re: Where can I find transistor BU508D? Message-ID: <1989Feb9.034650.7127@cs.rochester.edu> Date: 9 Feb 89 08:46:50 GMT References: <49876@yale-celray.yale.UUCP> <14390@cup.portal.com> Reply-To: ken@cs.rochester.edu (Ken Yap) Distribution: usa Organization: U of Rochester, CS Dept, Rochester, NY Lines: 34 |Most Japanese transistors I've seen use a numbering system that |starts with a single letter A-D and a few numbers. The actual part |number is '2S' followed by whatever is marked on the transistor. |For example, the part number you should look for is 2SD1439/65. |For some reason, they never put the '2S' on the package. | |As far as I've seen, 2SA and 2SB parts are PNP, while 2SC and 2SD are NPN. |(Someone prove me wrong on that one...) In another life I had a Japanese transitor data book (in Japanese). The numbers and letters actually mean something. (This is not surprising given that electronics engineers like neat classifications. :-)) The first number is the number of junctions, hence 1=diode, 2=transistor. The second letter means (I think) A, B = germanium C, D = silicon I'm not positive of this. I also forgot what the A/B and C/D difference is. (RF/audio?) Somebody please post the right info. It just so happens that most germanium transistors are PNP and most silicon are NPN. The final number is just a registration number, assigned serially. The European system is similar. The first letter is: A=germanium, B=silicon. (I'll bet they have one for GaAs too.) The second letter is the class of device, e.g. C=general purpose, F=junction FET. Then follows a registration number. The final letter is for variants of the same transistor (e.g. gain groups: they used so sort them by this and sell the higher gain ones for more). U in the second position is, I seem to remember, for deflection/video drive transistors, hence it's important to get one with adequate specs if you don't want to release the smoke particles they have marvelously packed into such a small package :-).