L
Lostgallifreyan
Guest
The H11F1 is (was) multisourced, Fairchild, Isocom, and possibly others.
I bought 20 from Digikey only a few weeks ago. Now they have none in stock,
and a recent poster here says he got a mail from Digikey announcing that
Fairchild will stop making them (not that they ever did, they bought out
the maker QT Optoelectronics, and now seem determined to bury this part).
RS Components list them for sale, made by Isocom, but on Isocom's site that
part and also H11F2 and H11F3 optoFET's have vanished with no trace that
they ever made any.
Despite recent changes to make them RoHS compliant, suggesting that full
production was intended to continue, this optoFET seems to be vanishing the
way of the Norwegian Blue. Anyone know why? If a component is good enough
that more than one company wants to make them, how is it that they can all
vanish as if some weird and surprisingly effective conspiracy was shutting
them all down at once? I'd like to know what could account for it, and what
could be used instead.
Most of all, I must know why and how such a thing can happen. It doesn't
make sense to specify any but the most enduring and commonplace parts in a
design if something as established as this can be torn down in a week or
three without notice. I've seen several people here complain of this kind
of thing, and it seems to be getting worse.
I bought 20 from Digikey only a few weeks ago. Now they have none in stock,
and a recent poster here says he got a mail from Digikey announcing that
Fairchild will stop making them (not that they ever did, they bought out
the maker QT Optoelectronics, and now seem determined to bury this part).
RS Components list them for sale, made by Isocom, but on Isocom's site that
part and also H11F2 and H11F3 optoFET's have vanished with no trace that
they ever made any.
Despite recent changes to make them RoHS compliant, suggesting that full
production was intended to continue, this optoFET seems to be vanishing the
way of the Norwegian Blue. Anyone know why? If a component is good enough
that more than one company wants to make them, how is it that they can all
vanish as if some weird and surprisingly effective conspiracy was shutting
them all down at once? I'd like to know what could account for it, and what
could be used instead.
Most of all, I must know why and how such a thing can happen. It doesn't
make sense to specify any but the most enduring and commonplace parts in a
design if something as established as this can be torn down in a week or
three without notice. I've seen several people here complain of this kind
of thing, and it seems to be getting worse.