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EOL (End of Life) parts, substitutes

Started by gwade001, May 17, 2017, 03:24:59 PM

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gwade001

Hello all,
Sorry if this topic is handled elsewhere.  While not new to circuits in general, I am new to pedal creation.  What I am finding is in 2017 most of the ICs, transistors, and diodes used in these schematics are quickly being obsoleted. 

I was curious what the creative minds out there were doing about this?  Are you sitting on hoards of parts? Paying out the nose? Going to SMT?  Experimenting with comparable substitutes?

Obviously the big pedal companies are finding a solution to this, I've just haven't found any information in my searches.  Maybe this is a big industry secret.


selfdestroyer

I think we will need specific part numbers you're running into as being obsolete. I can't think of a blanket answer for your question.

Cody

gwade001


Rockhorst

Those have been obsolete since...2014 or so? Places like Small Bear have heaps left for years and years of pedals to come. I know I have.

Govmnt_Lacky

Technically... some of those are not obsolete either. There are some manufacturers (Central comes to mind) that still produce these. Although... for a much higher cost  :o

solderfumes

I've bought NOS J201 and 2n5457s from my local electronics shop -- of questionable quality, mind you -- but moving forward I intend to use still-produced SMT components with the little adaptor boards.  I wish I'd done this already, as I'm working on a compressor that relies on 2n5457s and it appears mine might be fakes.

EBRAddict

The J201 and 2N2547 can be bought as SMD components ex. MMBFJ201 and MMBF5457 and mounted on an adapter board and used just like a TO-92 part. I've got a pedal where the designer included footprints for both packages.

gtr2

Also, check a supplier that specializes in parts that are typically only now used in pedals such as smallbear electronics.

Josh
1776 EFFECTS STORE     
Contract PCB designer

jubal81

Populating an entire board with SMD isn't something I find fun. However, just doing the transistors and ICs doesn't bother me and really makes life a lot easier. Through-hole resistors and caps are still very easy to come by, don't constantly get lost when you drop them and got that mojo look.


I've been meaning to check on Elecrow's rates on populating PCBs - have them do the thin-film SMD resistors, transistors and ICs and just leave off the through-hole film caps that carry the audio signal for me to solder. Kinda would be like cheating, though ...
"If you put all the knobs on your amplifier on 10 you can get a much higher reaction-to-effort ratio with an electric guitar than you can with an acoustic."
- David Fair

reddesert

For "big" pedal/effect companies or anyone who outsources assembly, the future is presumably SMD; many of them are already there.  That leaves cottage pedal makers, DIY'ers, prototype builders, and repairs. Through-hole JFETs were already mentioned as going away; I think it will take longer for through-hole BJTs and op-amps, let alone resistors and capacitors, but no idea how long. Some specialty ICs will just go away completely (like the CA3080 that everyone hunts), but then you have an example like Xvive reviving BBD chips. If it's worthwhile to do that, then it will probably be a long time before very common parts like through-hole op-amps are completely gone.

Ironically, when I started playing guitar, I saw articles about (possibly hysterical) fears that vacuum tubes would become unavailable, and now it looks like they may outlast some of the contemporary solid state components.

EBRAddict

Quote from: jubal81 on May 18, 2017, 05:45:05 AM
Populating an entire board with SMD isn't something I find fun.

Not by hand it isn't. I'm pretty close to building a reflow oven. I watched a Ben Heck video on Youtube and it looks pretty straightforward.

Domdec314

Just going off of Mouser, it seems like the 1n400x diodes are being obsoleted.

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davent

Quote from: Domdec314 on May 18, 2017, 04:24:26 PM
Just going off of Mouser, it seems like the 1n400x diodes are being obsoleted.

Sent from my Pixel using Tapatalk

Just checked 1N4007's and they show Fairchild's as end of life but for the other eight manufacturers they have in stock all looks normal. They also show over 500k on order.

http://ca.mouser.com/Semiconductors/Discrete-Semiconductors/Diodes-Rectifiers/Rectifiers/_/N-ax1mbZscv7?Keyword=1n4007&No=25&FS=True

dave
"If you always do what you always did- you always get what you always got." - Unknown

If my photos are missing again... they're hosted by photobucket... and as of 06/2017 being held hostage... to be continued?

wgc

I agree, it will be a while before all the through hole stuff goes obsolete, at least for pedals.  Prices will continue to climb though.

I've done a number of smd builds by hand and have since committed to doing all my future builds in smd.  I still have a few pcbs I bought a while ago that are nearly done though.  It's enough to remind me that while its still fun, I much prefer smd to through hole.
always the beautiful answer who asks a more beautiful question.
e.e. cummings

samhay

>I agree, it will be a while before all the through hole stuff goes obsolete, at least for pedals.

I think a distinction here has to be made between a product at 'end of life' or (technically) 'obsolete' vs. a product that is no longer attainable.
Most through hole semiconductors are EOL, or will be in the not-too-distant future. Quite a few passive through hole stuff (caps, resistors, etc) is starting to go EOL too.
However, that doesn't mean that many of them will soon be unobtainable. We still by NOS 50 year-old transistors after all.

>I was curious what the creative minds out there were doing about this?  Are you sitting on hoards of parts? Paying out the nose? Going to SMT?  Experimenting with comparable substitutes?

Personally (although the creative mind bit may be debatable) - Yes to some extent, sometimes, sometimes, absolutely.