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| BAW56 SOT-23 diode alternative? |
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| slybunda:
hi all, i need a diode which is found here: https://uk.rs-online.com/web/p/switching-diodes/7815161 Its a BAW56 type but its not in stock. Chatting to the webchat people at RS components they said this here is an alternative part: https://uk.rs-online.com/web/p/switching-diodes/7920793 The alternative they suggested is a BAV23A, is this a suitable alternative or does a BAW56 part have to be replaced with another BAW56 part? thanks |
| elektryk:
It depends on application, BAW56 has lower Trr. BTW it looks like BAW56 is still available (for example in Farnell). |
| slybunda:
Yes farnell has it but delivery cost is high. I just need 10 of these. Can get from AliExpress for like £1 for 100pcs but since iv used quality components for everything else i dont want to cheap out right at the end. I buy from rs components because they are a very short drive away from me so saves on high delivery prices. |
| Kleinstein:
There are many variants (e.g. different manufacturers) of the BAW56, and some are still available at RS. There are other types that may be closer (e.g. 1N4148 similar types with 4 ns trr) - here it depends on the application. Other sources also have them in stock (e.g. TME.EU). |
| T3sl4co1l:
I would be shocked if the difference between BAW56 and BAV23A mattered. Maybe it's one of those applications, maybe you can give some context as to whether it would matter, but I would most likely think it doesn't. Notable differences seem to be V_R, t_rr, C_d (a little bit, but their tolerances easily overlap), and maybe I_FSM (curiously, both provide a plot of this vs. t_p, but onsemi erroneously rates it at 4A (1µs) while plotting 11A!). It would be weird if V_R is being used as a characteristic (avalanche, but the voltage doesn't matter?*), but again, there's an outside chance it could matter. *In that they're not rated for it, as zeners are; or avalanche rectifiers for that matter. So the actual voltage is anyone's guess. Usually it's 10-40% above V_R, but it could be many times higher as is often the case with rectifiers (I have name-brand 1N4004s that break down ~1.3kV). They will still avalanche, most likely nondestructively at low currents (DC, thermally limited; pulsed may still be destructive), but the V(I) curve and tempco will be all over the place. That's generally the case for rectifiers, anyway; I haven't tested a whole lot of small-signal diodes in breakdown. Tim |
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