Data sheet source
The Dead Bug
Posts: 73
Hey, I just discovered this site: datasheetarchive.com/
I like scrounging strange and obscure components from junk electronics. Never know when they'll be handy to use in a robot or other circuit! What I usually do is vacuum de-solder a part from a piece of consumer or commercial electronics, dig up the data sheet, print it out, and put the part(s) in an anti-static bag stapled to the data sheet. I then file the sheet and part together in a filing cabinet. Makes for a very organized and easy to use system.
This seems to be the most comprehensive source I've found for data sheets on the junk I find out there.
Hope it helps.
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Name: Bruce Clemens
Work:· Clemensb@otc.edu
Good Stuff on my Blog: http://theDeadBug.journalspace.com
I like scrounging strange and obscure components from junk electronics. Never know when they'll be handy to use in a robot or other circuit! What I usually do is vacuum de-solder a part from a piece of consumer or commercial electronics, dig up the data sheet, print it out, and put the part(s) in an anti-static bag stapled to the data sheet. I then file the sheet and part together in a filing cabinet. Makes for a very organized and easy to use system.
This seems to be the most comprehensive source I've found for data sheets on the junk I find out there.
Hope it helps.
▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔
Name: Bruce Clemens
Work:· Clemensb@otc.edu
Good Stuff on my Blog: http://theDeadBug.journalspace.com
Comments
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Steve
http://ca.geocities.com/steve.brady@rogers.com/index.html
"Inside each and every one of us is our one, true authentic swing. Something we was born with. Something that's ours and ours alone. Something that can't be learned... something that's got to be remembered."