??? 10/06/10 15:49 Read: times |
#178951 - This stuff is still irrelevant until you know the type Responding to: ???'s previous message |
WHether it's 74LS, or 74AC, or 74C doesn't matter until you know whether it's a '165 or a '192, or whatever. How does this help you determine what that component marked 239-1322 is supposed to be?
That's what the typical person in Jeckson Ben's situation wants to know. Your cartoon shows a single signal headed for a single XOR to a single LPF, and a single ADC. How does that apply to determining which of the many 16-pin IC's "this one" would be? Determining technology is a totally different problem. The typical hobbyist, as I mentioned before, is interested in knowing (a) what this IC is, and (b) whether it is still working properly, because it once was. In the case wherein he had a working board that no longer works, in which case he knows the technology, that applies. In the case wherein he has an assortment of stock-numbered IC's, perhaps from surplus boards or surplus stock, he wants to know what they are AND whether they appear to work properly. If he has LOTS of some component, he can open one up and examine its die, where, normally, it's clearly marked right on the die. He'd only do that if he really must, though. RE |