• component ID help

    From Dave McGuire@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jul 23 19:04:17 2023
    Hi folks, I'm looking to identify what I think is a transistor, in a
    TO-72 package (TO-18 with four leads), in an old Victoreen radiation
    survey meter. The number is "ITS 30487". It's also marked "7736" which
    I assume is a date code.

    Can anyone tell me what this is?

    Thanks,
    -Dave

    --
    Dave McGuire, President/Curator
    Large Scale Systems Museum
    New Kensington, PA

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  • From Phil Hobbs@21:1/5 to Dave McGuire on Sun Jul 23 23:50:35 2023
    On 2023-07-23 19:04, Dave McGuire wrote:

      Hi folks, I'm looking to identify what I think is a transistor, in a TO-72 package (TO-18 with four leads), in an old Victoreen radiation
    survey meter.  The number is "ITS 30487".  It's also marked "7736" which
    I assume is a date code.

      Can anyone tell me what this is?

                   Thanks,
                   -Dave


    Probably an internal part number. BITD transistors were commonly marked
    with customer part numbers. (Around 1982, I was working in a group of
    RF engineers, and a lot of the parts available for us to use had cryptic
    part numbers like that.

    I assume that one of the leads is connected to the case (the usual
    situation).

    If it's the front end of a proportional counter, it might be a FET such
    as a 2N4117A JFET or a 3N163 MOSFET. For a Geiger counter, it would
    probably be something a bit more robust such as a 2N2222.

    If none of the leads is connected to the case, it could be something
    less common, such as a dual-gate FET. I used to use a lot of 3N201s in
    that package.

    Cheers

    Phil Hobbs

    --
    Dr Philip C D Hobbs
    Principal Consultant
    ElectroOptical Innovations LLC / Hobbs ElectroOptics
    Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics
    Briarcliff Manor NY 10510

    http://electrooptical.net
    http://hobbs-eo.com

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  • From Michael Terrell@21:1/5 to Phil Hobbs on Mon Jul 24 17:11:14 2023
    On Sunday, July 23, 2023 at 11:50:44 PM UTC-4, Phil Hobbs wrote:

    If none of the leads is connected to the case, it could be something
    less common, such as a dual-gate FET. I used to use a lot of 3N201s in
    that package.

    I used to replace a lot of 40763 dual gate Field Effect transistors in garage door openers. I was doing the for a friend with a garage door business as a sideline. A nice part, but they didn't like nearby lightning strikes.

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  • From whit3rd@21:1/5 to Dave McGuire on Mon Jul 24 18:24:12 2023
    On Sunday, July 23, 2023 at 4:04:23 PM UTC-7, Dave McGuire wrote:
    Hi folks, I'm looking to identify what I think is a transistor, in a
    TO-72 package (TO-18 with four leads), in an old Victoreen radiation
    survey meter. The number is "ITS 30487". It's also marked "7736" which
    I assume is a date code.

    Hard to be sure, but Siliconix was making PFET junction FET discretes with that package, like this one

    [archiveorg bitsavers_siliconixdixLowPowerDiscretesDataBook_42980376 width=560 height=384 frameborder=0 webkitallowfullscreen=true mozallowfullscreen=true]

    see page 120, 2N4867 series

    If that's your item, pin 4 is the case (just a shield, not diode-connected to anything).
    There might be a S embossed on the can...

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  • From Phil Hobbs@21:1/5 to Michael Terrell on Tue Jul 25 16:51:00 2023
    On 2023-07-24 20:11, Michael Terrell wrote:
    On Sunday, July 23, 2023 at 11:50:44 PM UTC-4, Phil Hobbs wrote:

    If none of the leads is connected to the case, it could be something
    less common, such as a dual-gate FET. I used to use a lot of 3N201s in
    that package.

    I used to replace a lot of 40763 dual gate Field Effect transistors in garage door openers. I was doing the for a friend with a garage door business as a sideline. A nice part, but they didn't like nearby lightning strikes.


    Coincidentally, I just bought a reel of BF998s, which are the last
    remaining dual-gate MOSFETs, now LTB, alas.

    I don't use a whole lot of them, but the amount of design space I've
    been losing lately due to EOL parts is pissing me off.

    The worst was the BFT92, which was almost ten times faster than the next fastest remaining PNP (5 GHz vs 600 MHz-ish).

    Cheers

    Phil Hobbs
    --
    Dr Philip C D Hobbs
    Principal Consultant
    ElectroOptical Innovations LLC / Hobbs ElectroOptics
    Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics
    Briarcliff Manor NY 10510

    http://electrooptical.net
    http://hobbs-eo.com

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