need philips ic

P

Phil J

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Anyone know where I can find a Philips IC
#OQ 0049 ? It's out of a Philips pm3267 scope.
Phil J
 
Phil J wrote:
Anyone know where I can find a Philips IC
#OQ 0049 ? It's out of a Philips pm3267 scope.
Phil J
Makers of scopes and other specialized electronic test gear use "house
numbers" for a lot of the parts, and specialized parts are their own ICs
or hybrids that nobody else made at the time.
Without an internally generated cross reference, it is rather
difficult to determine the industry part number if that is what was
used.
And if the part is one of those specialties, well, forget it unless
the scope is currently made or recently obsoleted.
..
 
On Wed, 14 Jan 2004 08:06:21 GMT, Robert Baer
<robertbaer@earthlink.net> wrote:
Phil J wrote:
Anyone know where I can find a Philips IC #OQ 0049 ? It's out of a Philips pm3267 scope.
Makers of scopes and other specialized electronic test gear use "house
numbers" for a lot of the parts, and specialized parts are their own ICs
or hybrids that nobody else made at the time.
Without an internally generated cross reference, it is rather
difficult to determine the industry part number if that is what was
used. And if the part is one of those specialties, well, forget it unless
the scope is currently made or recently obsoleted.
Philips has a good archive. You can try to contact Philips in the
Netherlands for the part or info.

Regards,
Pieter Hoeben
http://www.hoeben.com
 
Strangly enough, it's the only ic in the scope with no Philips part no.
in the manual parts list. Fluke was no help. It's a vertical preamp
chip custom made by Philips. Philips web site is useless for older
equiptment. Do they even make scopes anymore?
I thought maybe someone has a unrepairable scope with this ic.
Phil J


"Pieter Hoeben" <hoebenNOSPAM@bigfoot.com> wrote in message
news:b0bl00pcgka781g8ua2gvlj9ejmsm46q91@4ax.com...
On Wed, 14 Jan 2004 08:06:21 GMT, Robert Baer
robertbaer@earthlink.net> wrote:
Phil J wrote:
Anyone know where I can find a Philips IC #OQ 0049 ? It's out of a
Philips pm3267 scope.
Makers of scopes and other specialized electronic test gear use "house
numbers" for a lot of the parts, and specialized parts are their own ICs
or hybrids that nobody else made at the time.
Without an internally generated cross reference, it is rather
difficult to determine the industry part number if that is what was
used. And if the part is one of those specialties, well, forget it
unless
the scope is currently made or recently obsoleted.
Philips has a good archive. You can try to contact Philips in the
Netherlands for the part or info.

Regards,
Pieter Hoeben
http://www.hoeben.com
 

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