Testing of defaced FETs

Does anyone here want to help in trying to unmask the defaced FETs that you find in some amplifiers? The following is what you'd need for basic testing. Having this work distributed to a large number of techs could defray costs and tests of the same FETs by different techs could help confirm values.

A 12v power supply

A 2 ohm (other values would work but a standard 2 ohm would simplify) dummy load or current limiting resistor (25w or larger)

A way to accurately measure current (any multimeter capable of measuring 10 amps is good enough)

A standard multimeter to measure DCV.

Some form of heatsink to clamp the FET to during testing
 
 
To test low RDSon FETs, you need to run more current through them and measure the values accurately then use R=V/ I (simple Ohm's Law) to find the resistance. The diagram may be overwhelming but the test jig shows how simple it is. You simply limit current (I used a resistor) and measured the voltage and current. Then made the calculations. Garbage quality FETs will read significantly different. Good FETs will read relatively close. The tests include a reference FET so that you can see that the test conditions were consistent. The 24N40 shows what to expect from a garbage FET. The other FETs were from reputable distributors.

You can also compare capacitance if you have a reliable capacitance meter. The two columns of values show the FETs from one reliable distributor and one that you're warned to never use.
 

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That's what I do, but the IRS2093 is not available locally, and just like the last time you helped me fix those amplifiers I had to purchase the ICs from Digikey.

Now I need a lot of 4.7Ω and 10Ω 0805 resistors, along with the SMD caps around the IC. The 22uf ones, when they fail (High ESR) there's no audio from the channel or it's very low and distorted.

In any case, I'm going to order a bunch of parts and I'm just wondering if I should just stick with Digikey for all parts or just for the chips.