Sujet : Re: hobby electronics
De : '''newspam''' (at) *nospam* nonad.co.uk (Martin Brown)
Groupes : sci.electronics.designDate : 07. Jul 2024, 20:55:30
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <v6errj$fei8$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 07/07/2024 19:32, Don Y wrote:
On 7/7/2024 10:43 AM, Edward Rawde wrote:
When I worked as a designer I came across fake parts a few times. One reel
if devices was SO8 and the devices were marked with the correct number but
the manufacturer didn't make that part in SO8. So it wasn't hard to spot the
fake. Another reel of devices did have the correct part number on the
correct package but it was anybody's guess what chip was actually in the
package.
I had a client contact me about a problem he was having with some
other design (not one of mine). Begrudgingly, I offered to help
(I don't like having to troubleshoot other designs as you never
know the quality of the design/designer).
It quickly became apparent that one device was bad in every sample.
On closer inspection, there was no die *in* the package!
We once had a flashover event with a very expensive prototype 22bit ADC back in the late 80's where it vapourised the bond out leads. The chip was working really well right up to that point and we had a 6 sig fig linear ADC (intention was to replace bulk buy Solartron 7060s).
We decided honesty was the best course of action and the chip makers liasson guy admitted that if *they* hadn't tested it themselves before shipping it to us they could have believed that they forgot that step!
They gave us another chip and the things went into full production not long after they were able to produce them in bulk. Solartron were a bit surprised when one their best customers vanished completely.
-- Martin Brown