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transisor characteristics

A

amila

Jan 1, 1970
0
can any one send me grphs of transistor characteristics and explain the
graphs using npn(pnp) junction.
 
I

Ian Stirling

Jan 1, 1970
0
Joerg said:
Hello Ian,



It is amazing what Wikipedia has become. Our paper compared it to
Encyclopedia Britannica and it was not far behind that.

It is really rather incredible.
I'd love to say I predicted it, but my first response to the embryonic
one was 'that'll never work'.

The above entry is by no means perfect, I prefer the treatment in AoE,
but there is nothing that I can see that is categorically incorrect, and
of course, if I objected to it strongly enough, I could edit it.
 
R

Robert Baer

Jan 1, 1970
0
Anybody could, but you should use google or other search engine to do
that; many transistor makers have data sheets on most common bipolar
transistors.
Or a good search can be done via Mouser or DigiKey, using the part
number(s) you have in mind.
 
D

DaveM

Jan 1, 1970
0
Robert Baer said:
Anybody could, but you should use google or other search engine to do that;
many transistor makers have data sheets on most common bipolar transistors.
Or a good search can be done via Mouser or DigiKey, using the part number(s)
you have in mind.


I've never done anything like this, but you might try something like this:
Record a couple seconds of noise, save it to a .wav file (Noise1.wav)
Make a copy of the file (Noise2.wav)
Using a wav file editor (such as Audacity), trim the beginning second of noise
from Noise1.wav and save the file.
Load Noise2.wav and trim the ending second from the wav file and save it.
Now, load both files as separate tracks in stereo mode and then combine them,
making a new mono track. Save the new mono noise file.
Loop it and see how it sounds.

--
Dave M
MasonDG44 at comcast dot net (Just substitute the appropriate characters in the
address)

Some days you're the dog, some days the hydrant.
 
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