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Okay, but why pick an identifiction method that requires a manual?In article <8s23c.1041$P71.235774073@newssvr11.news.prodigy.com>,
"Henry Kolesnik" <kolesnik@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
After several calls to the factory I was able to find someone who had a book
on the codes. Here's what he gave me when he figured out what number was
important.
2116 = 1uF @ 50V
2064 = 6.8uF @ 35V
2139 = 18uF @ 50V
2031 = 22 uF @ 15V
2017 = 33uF @ 10V
2004-J = 47uF @ 6V
2035 = 68uF @ 15V
2021 = 100uF @ 10V
I've measured several on two different capacitor meters and all read close
to what the factory told me. I wonder why they coded the values with
numbers that don't make any sense? Military intellligence?
The numbers, like 2116, are just sequencial numbers on a very large
table that covers many pages in a manual. The numbers make sense
when you have the manual.
Nope, I think they are from 1956-1957, if you read the date codeOn Thu, 04 Mar 2004 12:15:28 -0800, "Watson A.Name \"Watt Sun - the
Dark Remover\"" <NOSPAM@dslextreme.com> Gave us:
This one should be interesting, mainly because Andrew Wylie has bid on
them, and he's an avid collector of old transistors. Film at 11...
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=2229117862&category=132
I wouldn't call 1975 rare or vintage. The first two were made in
the last two weeks of '75.
Well, before the 7400 TTL series there was DTL, before that RTL, and theHiya!
Seemed I got my phrasing a bit backwards there, that's not quite
what I meant!
Let's try that again....
"At what age do ICs become collectable?"
I had a pile of old IBM microfiche containing listings of IBM 360what a load of junk! there really is 1 born every minute.
He needs a fich reader, too! The techs from Bull threw out theirCBarn24050 wrote:
what a load of junk! there really is 1 born every minute.
I had a pile of old IBM microfiche containing listings of IBM 360
diagnostic programs. Somebody at IBM (company historian?)
paid $500 for a couple inch thick stack of them! Certainly
the most amazing eBay sale I've ever had.
(I pulled these out of the dumpster about 25 years ago!)
I have some old transistors in my gold scrap pile, but I'm going
to have to pull them out.
Jon
They're all the same. Just like you said color coded for ease of hookDoes anyone know what the physical/electronic difference is between a
regular, RCA coaxial cable used for audio, and the yellow cord (of a
3-part RCA cord set) used for the video output portion of a DVD
player? I thought the 3 cables were the same, just 3 regular coaxial
cables, and were just color-coded for convenience, but found that the
yellow cord designated for video does NOT carry an audio connection,
and so apparently is designed specifically for carrying the video
signal. How is this yellow cable different? Is it made of a
different material than copper? It it an alloy? Or constructed
differently? Does anyone know?
That _may_ be a BC517 transistorI'm in need of identifying components on a solar yard light. all components
are surface mount.. 2 of the components have 3 leads and look to be MosFets,
but I'm not sure. the only markings on them are kinda strange and I'm not
able to exactly put them as they are in this font.
One reads: 6C and then vertically arranged is a "dot" and a 3
picture?the other reads MAM and again, vertically arranged is a "dot" and an E.
It depends. I would not throw away an old 74xxx Chip with a readable
date code before 1970 and I just soldered out a vintage 1101 dynamic RAM
chip with the unbelievable capycity of 256 bits. this was the time when
you were able to cout the bit in your computer...
I clipped out an ad from an old ELECTRONICS magazine (1970) that boast
this type of RAM as "state of the art".
Where are we now? 256Mbits on one chip or even more?
Nice are the the old 1702 EPROMs with nice windows, you can still count
the 2048 bits, but you need a microscope with x50 magnification.
Another item are old germanium transistors in glass cylinders that are
painted black to avoid photoelectric effects. OC70 from VALVO, now
Philips.
maybe this is nostalgia, but I like it
Frank
Jon Elson wrote:
Mark (UK) wrote:
Hiya!
Seemed I got my phrasing a bit backwards there, that's not quite
what I meant!
Let's try that again....
"At what age do ICs become collectable?"
Well, before the 7400 TTL series there was DTL, before that RTL, and the
Motorola MECL I series. These date back to about 1966, I think.
The patent requests were filed in 1958 and 1959, and patents were issued
starting in 1961.
here's some MECL 300 series data sheets from 1967
http://d116.com/chips/mc300/
But, I found some here dating to 1963 :
http://www.wps.com/archives/solid-state-datasheets/Motorola/MECL/
which are about the very oldest I've ever heard of.
I worked on a computer built mostly out of MECL I and a little MECL II
in 1969-1971. It was pretty fast for its time.
Jon
Mark (UK) wrote:
Hiya!
Seemed I got my phrasing a bit backwards there, that's not quite
what I meant!
Let's try that again....
"At what age do ICs become collectable?"
Well, before the 7400 TTL series there was DTL, before that RTL, and the
Motorola MECL I series. These date back to about 1966, I think.
The patent requests were filed in 1958 and 1959, and patents were issued
starting in 1961.
here's some MECL 300 series data sheets from 1967
http://d116.com/chips/mc300/
But, I found some here dating to 1963 :
http://www.wps.com/archives/solid-state-datasheets/Motorola/MECL/
which are about the very oldest I've ever heard of.
I worked on a computer built mostly out of MECL I and a little MECL II
in 1969-1971. It was pretty fast for its time.
Jon
Have you tried posting this query on rec.games.video.arcade.collecting ??Hello,
I am trying to build an arcade monitor using a chassis from 8-liners.
The site instructs you to find a tube with a particular yoke
connector, pictured here - http://www.8liners.com/datatech/neckcon.jpg
"1hookedspacecadet" <rotoquad@**NoFrikkinSpam**earthlink.net> wrote in
news:NQ43c.3$JF5.1@tattler.gsu.edu:
Hello,
I am trying to build an arcade monitor using a chassis from 8-liners.
The site instructs you to find a tube with a particular yoke
connector, pictured here - http://www.8liners.com/datatech/neckcon.jpg
Have you tried posting this query on rec.games.video.arcade.collecting ??
I am somewhat of a beginner to the world of electronics, never dealt
with coils or transformers or such before.
Could anyone be so kind and explain to me what the following symbol
represents?
http://www.manicsexposed.com/t.gif
That it is a transformer of some sort is rather obvious, but the
built-in capacitor and the middle pin on the secondary coil puzzles
me.
The diagram claims this is a 455 kc IF (intermediate frequency, I
presume) transformer, although I have never seen such a transformer -
with a knob on it.
OK, let me give you a few example lines from the manual:On Mon, 08 Mar 2004 21:44:10 GMT Al <no.spam@here.com> wrote:
In article <8s23c.1041$P71.235774073@newssvr11.news.prodigy.com>,
"Henry Kolesnik" <kolesnik@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
After several calls to the factory I was able to find someone who had a
book
on the codes. Here's what he gave me when he figured out what number was
important.
2116 = 1uF @ 50V
2064 = 6.8uF @ 35V
2139 = 18uF @ 50V
2031 = 22 uF @ 15V
2017 = 33uF @ 10V
2004-J = 47uF @ 6V
2035 = 68uF @ 15V
2021 = 100uF @ 10V
I've measured several on two different capacitor meters and all read close
to what the factory told me. I wonder why they coded the values with
numbers that don't make any sense? Military intellligence?
The numbers, like 2116, are just sequencial numbers on a very large
table that covers many pages in a manual. The numbers make sense
when you have the manual.
Okay, but why pick an identifiction method that requires a manual?
Most other components this size, including theirs, just have the
relevant numbers printed on them.
-
-----------------------------------------------
Jim Adney jadney@vwtype3.org
Madison, WI 53711 USA
-----------------------------------------------
Here's one part of it, and the price is reasonable. Check out theLooking for a 30 watt, enclosed DC DC Converter with dual 12 volt and 5 volt
outputs, regulated. Will be used to operated an embedded single board
computer. Supply voltage will be 24 vdc. Any pointers?
Thanks
It depends. I would not throw away an old 74xxx Chip with a readable
date code before 1970 and I just soldered out a vintage 1101 dynamic RAM
chip with the unbelievable capycity of 256 bits. this was the time when
you were able to cout the bit in your computer...
I clipped out an ad from an old ELECTRONICS magazine (1970) that boast
this type of RAM as "state of the art".
Where are we now? 256Mbits on one chip or even more?
Nice are the the old 1702 EPROMs with nice windows, you can still count
the 2048 bits, but you need a microscope with x50 magnification.
Another item are old germanium transistors in glass cylinders that are
painted black to avoid photoelectric effects. OC70 from VALVO, now Philips.
maybe this is nostalgia, but I like it
Frank
You make a good point.
Jon Elson wrote:
Mark (UK) wrote:
Hiya!
Seemed I got my phrasing a bit backwards there, that's not quite
what I meant!
Let's try that again....
"At what age do ICs become collectable?"
Well, before the 7400 TTL series there was DTL, before that RTL, and the
Motorola MECL I series. These date back to about 1966, I think.
The patent requests were filed in 1958 and 1959, and patents were issued
starting in 1961.
here's some MECL 300 series data sheets from 1967
http://d116.com/chips/mc300/
But, I found some here dating to 1963 :
http://www.wps.com/archives/solid-state-datasheets/Motorola/MECL/
which are about the very oldest I've ever heard of.
I worked on a computer built mostly out of MECL I and a little MECL II
in 1969-1971. It was pretty fast for its time.
Jon
Yes. >>grin<<Does anyone know what the physical/electronic difference is between a
regular, RCA coaxial cable used for audio, and the yellow cord (of a
3-part RCA cord set) used for the video output portion of a DVD
player?
That may simply mean that it's defective. Normally, a yellow-plugcables, and were just color-coded for convenience, but found that the
yellow cord designated for video does NOT carry an audio connection,
and so apparently is designed specifically for carrying the video
signal.
Yes, there are 15KHz and 60Hz components to video signals, so I'dDoesn't composite video have frequency components that are fairly low? I'd
think any capacitor that would block audio frequencies would also mess with
the video signal. Maybe I'm wrong about the premise.
"1hookedspacecadet" <rotoquad@**NoFrikkinSpam**earthlink.net> wrote in
message news:NQ43c.3$JF5.1@tattler.gsu.edu...
Hello,
I am trying to build an arcade monitor using a chassis from 8-liners.
The
site instructs you to find a tube with a particular yoke connector,
pictured
here - http://www.8liners.com/datatech/neckcon.jpg
It can be 8 pin or 10 pin.
I have secured about 10, 19" color tubes for this purpose, but none had
the
proper connector. It also requires that the vertical winding impedance
be
between 11 and 17 ohms.
That's not the yoke connector, that's the tube base, what kind are you
finding on the TV's you have? The one you picture is very common, I've
only
encoundered a very few tubes that use something else.