CA3130EZ is the lead-free version of the part. Looks like good stock (both Newark and Avnet have thousands on the shelf), and should be usable unless you're sending it into space or something. If so, it appears that Rochester Electronics <http://www.rocelec.com> has stock on the shelf.

They are authorized distributors and manufacturers of obsolete semiconductors, and oftentimes the last resort for old components. If necessary, they can package from die that they have in stock, or even reverse engineer old designs. Of course, that's very pricey, but if you're a government and need to maintain some 20 year old piece of critical equipment, they may be one of the few avenues to getting something working again.

--Glen

Quoting Bob Smither <[email protected]>:

On 04/13/2012 05:45 PM, Michael Blazer wrote:
Findchips was my first choice as well. Looks like Newark and Avnet have stock.
I deal with both on a regular basis with good results.

Google results show Newark and Allied, but when you click through there is no
stock :-(.

Looks like Dale's lead to JameCo might be the best:

http://www.jameco.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?freeText=3130e&langId=-1&storeId=10001&productId=12183&search_type=jamecoall&catalogId=10001&ddkey=http:StoreCatalogDrillDownView

(or http://tinyurl.com/7fervfd )





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