Glass bead rectifiers

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Searched through my data and didn't find anything for a two letter prefix. Now if it were a three letter prefix like BYM, that might produce more results. I don't know how ambitious you are, but it is possible to test diodes and rectifiers for speed and recovery. I think the circuits are sometimes published by the diode makers, or at least the test conditions are given.

Conrad
 
Anyone used them?
Yes. As well as involvement in a manufacturing line for them.

How is their quality.?
That depends on the manufacturer.

the only manufacture I can find on the web says they are fast response.
They can be anything from 2 microseconds to 2 nanoseconds.

Any help would be appreciated. Thanks
Sure. Do you have any particular question?

In general:
1. The axial lead glass bead is a method of passivating the junction to prevent ionic contamination from destroying the diode. It is applied as a slurry to the device, and it is fired. It bonds to the moly or tungston slugs that sandwich the die. The leads are typically nailhead coppers that are brazed to the slugs.
2. Some diodes such as the '914, are glass sleeves slipped over the brazed assembly and fired, it shrinks and seals to the slugs.
3. Super-rectifiers, such as General Instrument (their patent expired in the late 80's), had a glass bead that was overmolded with plastic to facilitate auto-insertion.

In the early days, the glass bead was a symbol of high reliability. As the molding plastics and protection compounds improved, non-glass devices became more and more reliable.

Cheers, John
 
Thanks for the information. The part number on them is BY56MV. I would like to know if replacing them with Fairchild "stealth" diodes would improve the sq in a Chinese made DAC. Replacement would be a real PITA due to the size of the circuit board and I would rather not have to do it. If it would SIGNIFICANTLY improve the sq, then I will do the fiddly bits. Thanks
 
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