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Transistor codes: Japanese Industrial Standard Pro-electron code (JIS) SA: SB: SC: SD: SE: SF: SG: SH: SJ: SK: SM: SQ: SR: SS: ST: SV: SZ: PNP HF transistor PNP AF transistor NPN HF transistor NPN AF transistor Diodes Thyristors Gunn devices UJT P-channel FET/MOSFET N-channel FET/MOSFET Triac LED Rectifier Signal diodes Avalanche diodes Varicaps Zener diodes A = low gain B = medium gain C = high gain No suffix = ungrouped (any gain) The first letter indicates the material: A = Ge B = Si C = GaAs R = compound materials. (Most common type is B.) The second letter indicates the device application: A: Diode RF B: Variac C: transistor, AF, small signal D: transistor, AF, power E: Tunnel diode F: transistor, HF, small signal K: Hall effect device L: Transistor, HF, power N: Optocoupler P: Radiation sensitive device Q: Radiation producing device R: Thyristor, Low power T: Thyristor, Power U: Transistor, power, switching Y: Rectifier Z: Zener, or voltage regulator diode Transistor marking codes We are lucky with transistors that, apart from a few oddities which I'll talk about later, most markings follow one of these codes. ICs are more tricky as you're often dealing with custom chips or mask programmed devices with manufacturers individual codes. A quick hint though: always look for known numbers (eg 723, 6502, 2764) etc between the suffix and prefix, and beware of the date code. Right, back to transistors. The three standard transistor marking schemes are: 1. Joint Electron Device Engineering Council (JEDEC). These take the form: digit, letter, serial number, [suffix] where the letter is always 'N' the first digit is one less than the number of legs, (2 for transistors unless they're crippled although I'm not sure about 4 legged transistors maybe they get a 3) except for 4N and 5N which are reserved for optocouplers. The serial number runs from 100 to 9999 and tell nothing about the transistor except its approximate time of introduction. The (optional) suffix indicates the gain (hfe) group of the device: A = low gain B = medium gain C = high gain No suffix = ungrouped (any gain). See the data sheet for the actual gain spread and groupings. The reason for gain grouping is that the low gain devices are fractionally cheaper than the high gain devices, resulting in savings for high volume users. Examples- 2N3819, 2N2221A, 2N904. 2. Japanese Industrial Standard (JIS). These take the form: digit, two letters, serial number, [suffix] Again, the digit is one less than the number of legs. The letters indicate the applicatin area and flavour of the device according to the following code: SA: PNP HF transistor SB: PNP AF transistor SC: NPN HF transistor SD: NPN AF transistor SE: Diodes SF: Thyristors SG: Gunn devices SH: UJT SJ: P-channel FET/MOSFET SK: N-channel FET/MOSFET SM: Triac SQ: LED SR: Rectifier ST: Avalanche diodes SV: SZ: Zener diodes SS: Signal diodes Varicaps The serial number runs from 10-9999. The (optional) suffix ndicates that the type is approved for use by various Japanese organisations. NOTE. since the code for transistors always begins with 2S, it is sometimes (more often than not is seems) ommitted so, for example, a 2SC733 would be marked C 733. Examples- 2SA1187, 2SB646, 2SC733. 3. Pro-electron. These take the form: two letters, [letter], serial number, [suffix] The first letter indicates the material: A = Ge B = Si C = GaAs R = compound materials. Needless to say the biggest majority of transistors begin with a B. The second letter indicates the device application: A: Diode RF B: Variac C: transistor, AF, small signal D: transistor, AF, power E: Tunnel diode F: transistor, HF, small signal K: Hall effect device L: Transistor, HF, power N: Optocoupler P: Radiation sensitive device Q: Radiation producing device R: Thyristor, Low power T: Thyristor, Power U: Transistor, power, switching Y: Rectifier Z: Zener, or voltage regulator diode The third letter indicates that the device is intended for industrial or professional rather than commercial applications. It is usually a W,X,Y or Z. The serial number runs from 100-9999. The suffix indicates the gain grouping, as for JEDEC. Examples- BC108A, BAW68, BF239, BFY51. Apart from JEDEC, JIS and Pro-electron, manufacturers often introduce their own types, for commercial reasons (ie to get their name into the code) or to emphasise that the range belongs to a specialist application. Common brand specific prefixes are: MJ: Motorolla power, metal case MJE: Motorolla power, plastic case MPS: Motorolla low power, plastic case MRF: Motorolla HF, VHF and microwave transistor RCA: RCA RCS: RCS TIP: Texas Instruments power transistor (platic case) TIPL: TI planar power transistor TIS: TI small signal transistor (plastic case) ZT: Ferranti ZTX: Ferranti Examples- ZTX302, TIP31A, MJE3055, TIS43. Many manufacturers also make custom parts for large volume OEM use. These parts are optimised for use in a given part of a given circuit. They usually just have a manufacturers stamp and an untraceable number. Often when a company goes bankrupt, or has surplus at the end of a production run, these transistors find their way into hobbyist bargain packs. There is no way that you can trace data on these devices, so they are only suitable as LED drivers, buffers, etc, where the actual parameters are not important. Check carefully before buying. Once you have identified your part, a trip to the data sheet or equivalents book is called for (anyone know of an on-line equivalents list?).