logoalt Hacker News

frrlpplast Saturday at 1:16 AM2 repliesview on HN

BC547? 337? I think they are Texas devices, much popular too.


Replies

woadwarrior01today at 11:39 AM

Exactly, I grew up playing with BC547 and BC337s (my father was an electronics engineer) and only later found 2N2222 and 2N3904. Those were almost entirely unheard of in India.

adrian_blast Saturday at 7:04 AM

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).

Motorola and some other US companies, like Texas Instruments and Fairchild, entered the transistor market very early, when they defined types like 2N2222, which became industry standards.

However, because these devices were defined early, they had rather poor characteristics. When European companies like Philips, Siemens, Thomson, SGS-ATES entered the market later, they defined transistors and other devices with improved characteristics.

Because of this, in Europe the devices with European part numbers, like BC337, were generally preferred, because they provided better analog performance, e.g. lower noise and higher bandwidth.

However nowadays this has become mostly irrelevant, because a legacy transistor vendor makes only a small number of different kinds of transistors, distinguished mainly by die size, because bigger sizes are needed to handle bigger currents. Then the transistors are packaged and marked with any of the legacy part numbers, depending on what part number the customer orders.

So while old transistors may have quite different characteristics depending on the part name, many modern transistors behave the same, regardless how they are marked.

show 3 replies