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#1 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Jan 2010
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Hi Guys, normally, copious amounts of searching and lurking reveal solutions to my challenges... But not this time! So, here I go with my first post.
I recently took delivery of a not-working Aussie transistor radio with a 2 - transformer push-pull amp section. I am trying to work out what the transistors are and cannot find any info. Have any of you seen these before? They are in plastic cases and have a logo that looks like a C and an E melded together. The ID on the transistors are 4003E (these are the paired p-p transistors), 401B, 401C. Attached a pic I just took including a quick drawn representaion of the logo on the transistors. Any help greatly appreciated! Murray. |
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#2 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: May 2007
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They will probably be germanium transistors.
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#3 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Oct 2007
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I thought Ge's were always in metal cans, and that plastic cases didn't come along until Si. That is still a VERY early pacakge.
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#4 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: May 2007
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Early small-signal germaniums were often in glass, but painted black (e.g. 0C45). Audio output (0C81) were in metal cans, for better heatsinking. (Europe, I'm not sure what happened elsewhere). Plastic cases were not common, I agree. However, push-pull with transformers seems to me to indicate the germanium era. Early Ge were almost all PNP, so complementary output (as used with Si) was not possible.
Try measuring diode voltage drops between terminals. If 0.1-0.2V forward then Ge, 0.5-0.7V then Si. You might be able to find at least one good junction even on a blown transistor. Is the radio positive or negative earth? This might indicate PNP or NPN, although not foolproof as some circuits were built 'upside down'. Could they be Japanese? |
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#5 |
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diyAudio Member
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Looks similar to CDC 8002 found in old sansui amps, and other early japanese. Don't have any guesses who actually made them. Good hunting.
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Steve |
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#6 |
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diyAudio Member
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Ask member tiefbassuebertr.
Click to PM him:http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/priva...=newpm&u=33763. Regards, Max.
__________________
We should not dwell on what we do not have, but, instead, be grateful for what we do have! |
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#7 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Atlanta Ga. USA
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in Conrac and RCA broadcast TV equipment of the 60s and early 70s. They usually have a standard JEDEC number on them. They were some of the first cheap transistors made. The junction was built on a circular slab and they a drop of epoxy was dropped on it to seal it up. I still have some old boards that have them on it.
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#8 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Atlanta Ga. USA
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And for the record, they're called "epoxy transistors."
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#9 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Atlanta Ga. USA
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And they were silicon.
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#10 |
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diyAudio Moderator
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Quite common in the 1970s - I bought a bunch of similar PNP silicon transistors (Vce 25V) at Radio Shack around 1973 for my very first diy phono stage. I thought it sounded great at the time.
Unless damaged these transistors are probably still in working order and can be tested.
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