What ever you do, don't use a Fairchild part. When I worked for Intel in the 
80's, we finally band using Fairchild for any latching device. They failed on 
pullup current, even when the parts were sent back and they claimed they were 
good. We just gave up on them, we couldn't hold production while they figured 
it out.
We had a similar problem with PowerOne, a manufacture of power supplies. Since 
it was a custom supply, we had to send someone to their plant to fix their 
final test.
Dwight


________________________________
From: cctalk <cctalk-boun...@classiccmp.org> on behalf of Nigel Johnson Ham via 
cctalk <cctalk@classiccmp.org>
Sent: Saturday, May 14, 2022 10:50 AM
To: Paul Koning via cctalk <cctalk@classiccmp.org>
Subject: Re: Replacement for a DEC 7474 Chip

AFAIR LS can only drive one unit TTL load.

I may have some 7474, even of that vintage, if you cannot find any
anywhere else.

cheers,

Nigel


Nigel Johnson, MSc., MIEEE, MCSE VE3ID/G4AJQ/VA3MCU
Amateur Radio, the origin of the open-source concept!
Skype:  TILBURY2591


On 2022-05-14 13:48, Paul Koning via cctalk wrote:
>
>> On May 14, 2022, at 1:41 PM, John Robertson via 
>> cctalk<cctalk@classiccmp.org>  wrote:
>>
>> On 2022/05/14 10:11 a.m., Rob Jarratt via cctalk wrote:
>>> Hello,
>>>
>>> I have found a bad DEC 7474 chip on my M7133 board. Clearly it is a
>>> 74<something>74 D flip flop. The problem is I don't know which modern series
>>> would be the best one to replace it with. I am sure I have seen a list
>>> somewhere of modern equivalents for some DEC chip numbers, but I can't
>>> remember where.
>>>
>>> If it helps at all, on the PDP 11/24 printset it is E78 on page K6 of the
>>> schematic (p157 of the PDF).
>>>
>>> Picture of the failed chip here:
>>> https://rjarratt.files.wordpress.com/2022/05/damaged-dec-7474-4_li.jpg
>>>
>>> Can anyone tell me what the best modern equivalent is likely to be?
>>>
>>> Thanks
>>>
>>> Rob
>>>
>> You are stuck with using an original 7474 family assuming this is driving 
>> other early TTL. 74LS74, and others simply don't have the drive capability 
>> to work.
> I know LS has less fanout, but is it not able to drive plain 74xx at all?  
> That doesn't sound right.  If the circuit in question runs near the fanout 
> spec of plain 74 the yes, 74LS won't work.
>
> Spec sheets and the actual schematic will give a definitive answer.
>
>        paul
>
>

Reply via email to