[sdiy] TI SN74LS624N, worth buying?
Graham Atkins
gatkins at blueyonder.co.uk
Fri Nov 11 01:16:50 CET 2011
Who rattled your cage ?
That sounds very bitter and twisted, If certain idiots didn't over
value some of the old junk out there there wouldn't be an unrealistic
demand for "rare" IC's, and if people want to waste thousands of
dollars on these
things thats their problem.
Graham
On 10 Nov 2011, at 06:58, Eric Wood wrote:
> If that is what you need to hear then I will say it, I guess. I
> understand the wanting and willingness to learn about these things
> and support your striving to do so. But, am I the only person that
> thinks buying hard to find chips for the sake of having them, and
> having zero idea what you may eventually do with them is a less than
> noble endeavor?
> There a people out there with machines they have invested thousands
> of dollars on that may or may not need these components to keep
> alive! Really guys? Let's experiment with stuff that is not
> unavailable! Please?
>
> Sent from my Cerebellum!!!
>
> On Nov 8, 2011, at 3:06 PM, Bob K <farfisa5 at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Thanks for the advice Tom, John, and everybody else!
>>
>> The Coolaudio V2164 chips from Mammoth will be ordered soon.
>>
>> I also found some stuff musicfromouterspace.com. Whew, does that guy
>> have fun parts and a shitload of information!
>>
>> He carries packages of 10 NJM13700D (LM13700) chips for $16.
>>
>> I also picked up a set of Matched 2N3904s And Tempco while there
>> ($12). Don't know what the hell I'll do with it but, hey, I might as
>> well get them while available.
>>
>> TL074? Great..... more stuff to buy.
>>
>> I've officially taken over half of my girlfriend's bookcase with
>> electronic parts. It used to be four shelves of yarn, now it's two
>> shelves of yarn and two shelves of parts.
>>
>> I'm slowly winning the battle until I hear that infamous, "When the
>> hell are you actually going to make something?!" question.
>>
>> Thanks again!
>>
>> -Bob
>>
>> On Tue, Nov 8, 2011 at 12:46 PM, Tom Wiltshire
>> <tom at electricdruid.net> wrote:
>>> I completely agree with John. You can build an entire synth with
>>> this chip alone. Ok, maybe you need an op-amp too, but a TL074
>>> would do it.
>>>
>>> And irritatingly, as soon as we DIYers find a decent chip, they
>>> take it off us. Last time buy on Analog Devices website. The
>>> Coolaudio V2164 clone is still available though (Small bear,
>>> Mammoth, others I'm sure), and you might yet find some 'original'
>>> analog devices SSM2164s lurking about.
>>>
>>> Buy 'em now, then stick them on ebay in a years time at $25 a pop
>>> - after all, they're original analog SSM chips, right? That's what
>>> everyone else would do!
>>>
>>> T.
>>>
>>> On 8 Nov 2011, at 17:48, blacet at blacet.com wrote:
>>>
>>>> This may have already been mentioned but the SSM2164 is arguably
>>>> the most
>>>> interesting IC for general electronic music use. Althought it is
>>>> intended
>>>> as a VCA, the voltage control blocks find uses in LFOs, filters,
>>>> VCOs etc.
>>>> This is one IC all DIYers should become experts in the use of!
>>>>
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