No, you can’t say that “SO14” without W is “wrong”: TI’s convention (which closely follows the standards bodies) is to use SOIC to refer to JEDEC standards, and SO to refer to JEITA standards. As it happens, JEITA’s narrowest is wider than JEDEC’s narrowest.
I can. As I clearly said, the SOIC 5-mm body is NOT a SOIC-wide. SOIC wide bodies are 7.5mm wide (and 10mm with the pins.)
:::whoosh::: <— the sound of the point going right over your head.
The point is that SOIC (JEDEC) and SO/SOP (JEITA)
aren't the same thing.
JEDEC SOIC narrow: 3.9mm
JEITA SO: 5mm
JEDEC SOIC wide: 7.5mm
So you can't say that "SO [5mm] without W is wrong"
because it's not a wide version, it's the narrowest within its standard.
Nexperia is following JEDEC but calling it SO, not SOIC. Not as faithful to the conventions of the standards bodies, but still not outright wrong.
Whatever, they are using the same abbreviations to refer to different packages. This is what is confusing to customers.
Nobody was claiming otherwise. I was adding info to
clarify.
Each vendor does a different thing, and you need to be aware of it.
But it's not vendor-specific sizes (the OP's suspicion), it's that there are various industry standards that vendors use.
Also, note that you mixed up the part suffixes and the package drawing codes. D (SOIC) and NS (SO) are the package drawing codes, NOT the part suffixes!
TI is very nice for that. Ahem. The "NS" package can be found in the suffix for the "CD40106BNSR", the "PW" package in "CD40106BPW" and "CD40106BPWR", but not for "N", "J" and "D".
Same thing for most of their parts. The "package drawing" suffix can be found in some of their parts' ordering suffixes, but not all. So that you pretty much always have to consult the full "PACKAGING INFORMATION" tables.
Wrong. The fact that some of the part suffixes are the same as their package codes does NOT mean they're the same thing! If you'd finished reading the paragraph you cropped at "…NOT the part suffixes", you'd have understood this.
Every part has a part suffix, not just some of them!! It's just that the part suffixes and the package codes may be the same, but also may not be. (Thanks to TI having acquired many other semiconductor manufacturers over the years, whose part numbers they had to keep, the TI package codes and the part number suffixes aren't consistent.)
For this part, the N, J, and D
package codes correspond to the E, F, and M
part suffixes, for plastic DIP, ceramic DIP, and SOIC, respectively.
If one doesn't care how the IC's are wrapped (i.e. tube, tray, reel size, etc), then referring to the Device Information table on page 1 of the datasheet is sufficient to ensure you order the IC in the correct package.