IHS: Counterfeit parts represent $169B annual risk
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Re: IHS: Counterfeit parts represent $169B annual risk
makes me wonder if the bum mitsubishi rd100hhf1 i got a while back were fakes.
its a perfect target for fakers.not sure what could be remarked.i wasnt going to autopsy something i can return though. -
Re: IHS: Counterfeit parts represent $169B annual risk
From the linked article:
The five most commonly counterfeited semiconductor types are analog integrated circuits (ICs), microprocessors, memory ICs, programmable logic devices and transistors, all of which are commonly used in commercial and military applications, according to data provided by IHS. Together, these five component commodity groups accounted for slightly more than two-thirds of all counterfeit incidents reported in 2011, IHS said.I wonder if there is a similar report about caps.
The first was some purported high-end MOSFETs, purportedly from STMicro. The genuine parts were temporarily in short supply, and our Purchasing people had found some at a non-authorized (but generally reputable) distributor. Samples were sent to us prior to purchase to test. They looked good outwardly, but one of our tests proved they were not the genuine STMicro parts. That test also revealed what the parts really were, an older, very good, but not adequate for our specific application, IR MOSFET. Evidently what happened is that some one got hold of a large batch of surplus IR parts, effaced the IR markings, and remarked the parts with the numbers of higher performance, more scarce, more demanded parts. As I mentioned, the originalk IR parts were, themselves, very good, so given the usual margins designed into many products, companies who might have bought the bogus parts might or might not ever have experienced much worse than a somewhat diminished field life for products in which the bogus MOSFETs were used.
The second case also involved parts which were temporarily in short supply, and a reputable but unauthorized distributor. The parts we had specified were NCC/UCC LXZ series, 63V, in a 16mm x 20mm case (470uF?). We received a bag of samples to test, and they were obvious fakes, recognizable as such without opening the plastic bag. The outer sleeve was black instead of brown; the label font was wrong; the date code format and position were wrong (we had genuine parts on hand, so this was a counterfeiter's error, not a memory failure on my part or an unfamiliar variant). The counterfeits were laughably bad and I never bothered to open the bag, let alone waste time testing them!
I suspect the EE Times article above only captures the costs of bad parts being discovered in-house, plus warranty repair and recalls costs. Consequences to customers whose equipment fails is probably unquantified, especially with critical applications such as aviation, military and medical electronics.PeteS in CA
Power Supplies should be boring: No loud noises, no bright flashes, and no bad smells.
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To kill personal responsibility, initiative or success, punish it by taxing it. To encourage irresponsibility, improvidence, dependence and failure, reward it by subsidizing it.
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Re: IHS: Counterfeit parts represent $169B annual risk
As far as I know, Chemi-Con electrolytic capacitors never come in black for low-ESR units - the colour of Chemi-Con 105C units and low-ESR units are brown, although certain series are in blue and also green, as far as I know.My first choice in quality Japanese electrolytics is Nippon Chemi-Con, which has been in business since 1931... the quality of electronics is dependent on the quality of the electrolytics.Comment
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by RainyHas anyone seen these?
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Now I'm sitting on two power supplies that seem to make voltage out of thin air.
Not sure what to do. I prefer not to get these bullshit counterfeit Chinese parts as it causes me a ton of trouble between my repairs and sellers.
I have a hunch somewhere they are being swapped in... - Loading...
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