But if you are going to repair/restore something
then IMHO it makes a lot of
sense to have common spares around.
Agreed! But you generally tend to accumulate those spares *after* you have been involved
in that particular
True. I wil bet you didn't have firearm spares when you first started out either....
area for a while. Coming into it from scratch, you
might not even know which parts you're most likely to need.
And buying every common-ish part that you might need is an expensive proposition.
That is also true. And it's not obvious what is common and it very much depends on the
machine you
are working on. If you fix 1980s home micros you probably have a few 6502 and Z80s
on-hand, but they
are not a lot of use in a PDP12.
[...]
extras. But I don't have a single 2N3904 in my
junk box, because I don't think I've had to replace one in the last
I use them all the time for LED drivers, etc....
30 years, just based on the kinds of things I've
been working on. So it's not my go-to part. Now, 10k resistors
and 0.1uF ceramic caps... those things I use a lot. :)
And to get back to that darn M452 module that started this, it is _precisely_ those sort
of R's and C's you need
to change its frequency!
-tony
--
Mark J. Blair, NF6X <nf6x at nf6x.net>
http://www.nf6x.net/