That crack should not be there. Looks like a varistor. Maybe if you provide a full view photo....
I would say it is a spark gap.
They used them on the socket board for the CRT on a lot of colour TVs.
The first time I saw them,I thought they were faulty capacitors.
Spark gap. It should basically measure as open circuit till the voltage across it reaches betwwen 1-2 kilovolts where it breaks down.
Anybody happen to know this connector?
Only have this photo, so cannot measure the thing, but my guess its a 2.5mm or 2.54mm pitch.
Next up fellas..
I found these in the loft today, can't seem to find out what they are from the numbers on them, any ideas please?
Numbers around the top rim of one of them are 771139 and SGS87305
Thank you
orb
Looks like an equivelent to a LM305 regulator here is a pic of one here
http://www.wellgainelectronics.com/ProductImages/ics_VoltageRegulator/NSC%20IC%20LM305H.JPG they were quite commonly used in arcade machies power regulator supplys in the late 70's early 80's.
Edit Just noticed it has already been answered... Fail on my part.
Anyone have any idea about this connector?
its a ZIF type female for a 5 pin, single sided cable. specifically fits the li-ion battery connector for ipod video / classics. real small pin spacing; maybe 0.5mm
i would love a part number, or even a good starting point for finding a reasonable match.
ifixit carry basic ipod spares, doesn't look like they carry that connector, so perhaps send them an email
http://www.ifixit.com
i need a source for 500-1000, at least.
other-wise ill have to look into a different approache
OK , I was thinking 1 off, so try
http://www.toby.co.uk/index.aspx, they have a big range of connectors and you can email them the connector picture etc and they will try to find it for you.
anyone have any suggestions on terms and categories to start looking for something like this?
The female one is usually a Dupont connector(as the chinese call it) while the male one ... is also dupont
The female one is usually a Dupont connector(as the chinese call it) while the male one ... is also dupont
I've heard the Dupont name before. As far as I can tell though, I can't find anyone who sells these connectors on their own.
@steve30
Check molex part number 43031-0007 (micro-fit 3.0 connectors) as they call them, might be what you need.
But I suggest to download the pdf catalog from various distributors (connectors section) and browse it, you might see something that suits your needs better!
Printed versions are always better for browsing. I found that molex part number on an old 2007-2008 printed catalog from RS Components for example, that I keep handy.
George
The female one is usually a Dupont connector(as the chinese call it) while the male one ... is also dupont
I've heard the Dupont name before. As far as I can tell though, I can't find anyone who sells these connectors on their own.
I think it comes from the french "Du Pont". I'm not too good at french, but I think it means "of bridge" as in bridging wire or jumper wire.
The female one is usually a Dupont connector(as the chinese call it) while the male one ... is also dupont
I've heard the Dupont name before. As far as I can tell though, I can't find anyone who sells these connectors on their own.
I think it comes from the french "Du Pont". I'm not too good at french, but I think it means "of bridge" as in bridging wire or jumper wire.
In case of the connectors it indirectly comes from the chemical company DuPont. Among many other things they do wire isolations and materials for connectors. The designation "DuPont connector" is a misnomer coming from China. Someone mistook the manufacturer of a wire or connector material for the name of the connector or cable assembly, and that happened to get a live of its own. Especially because those 2.54 mm pitch, 0.64 mm square pin connectors don't have a common name. Every manufacturer calls them differently. Maybe the name will really stick, and we finally get a common name for these connectors.
The female one is usually a Dupont connector(as the chinese call it) while the male one ... is also dupont
I've heard the Dupont name before. As far as I can tell though, I can't find anyone who sells these connectors on their own.
I think it comes from the french "Du Pont". I'm not too good at french, but I think it means "of bridge" as in bridging wire or jumper wire.
In case of the connectors it indirectly comes from the chemical company DuPont. Among many other things they do wire isolations and materials for connectors. The designation "DuPont connector" is a misnomer coming from China. Someone mistook the manufacturer of a wire or connector material for the name of the connector or cable assembly, and that happened to get a live of its own. Especially because those 2.54 mm pitch, 0.64 mm square pin connectors don't have a common name. Every manufacturer calls them differently. Maybe the name will really stick, and we finally get a common name for these connectors.
A bit like the way suppliers started calling Belling Lee coax connectors "PAL connectors"!
@watchitfool
It looks a lot like
Molex 52559 but they don't come in 5 pin...
//C
This is a logic level n-MOSFET, isn't it?
2SK1904Alexander.
Not really, it would like a little more voltage unless you run it under 5A.
What is this thing ?
Found it in old CRT computer monitor main board, located around the power switching circuit at mains input area, and through the trace, one of it's leg was connected to the common mode transformer which is connected at the mains line.
Put a TO220 diode beside it to show it's relative size, and no, its not a fuse cause there is already a glass fuse and a mov in the circuit. Measured results in the pic and during measurements, swapped probes (+/-) positions and also diode mode show no polarity.
TIA
Degaussing thermistor. It is connected across the mains ( nowdays via a relay to reduce power) and has the degaussing coil on the CRT connected to the middle pin across to the left pin ( bottom view, the one with 2k3 resistance) so that when power is supplied it allows an AC current to flow through the coil. The device has a PTC thermistor and a NTC thermistor inside as 2 discs connected between the pins. As the device heats up the 17R unit heats up and the 2k3 unit drops in resistance will it reaches equilibrium where almost all the voltage is dropped and no current flows in the coil. This results in the current in the coil starting at a high value then smoothly dropping in value to near zero, just right to remove any residual magnetism from a CRT front mask so it does not cause colour errors.
You also get a 2 pin version, where it self heats and has a VDR action, such that it basically drops the current to under 10mA through the coil.
Just note that these do run rather hot in use.
So this thing called "degaussing thermistor" which is just a NTC + PTC bonded together, thanks SeanB !
Yes, if you rip it apart you will find 3 plates with 2 ceramic discs between them, grey with a silver coating on the flat faces.