lm386 "no longer manufactured"?

Started by slashandburn, October 27, 2014, 09:14:11 AM

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slashandburn

just been on farnell.com to compare prices.   One of my favourite new toys the LM386 (n1 through to n4) is showing as no longer manufactured.  Limited stocks of the n-3 still available.  is it time to cry, panic, or find a new hobby?  maybe i'm over reacting.

bluebunny

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Ohm's Law - much like Coles Law, but with less cabbage...

slashandburn

Well thats a relief! Thanks.  Sorry if I caused a small wave of panic.

bluebunny

No problem.  Go and have a bit of a lie-down in a darkened room with a large alcoholic drink.  You've earned it.   :D
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Ohm's Law - much like Coles Law, but with less cabbage...

slashandburn

I've not long woke up. I'm definately tempted though! I was trying to think of small silver linings, like perhaps the two spare I have in the shed might rocket up in value and go somewhat towards my currently empty pension fund!

armdnrdy

I just designed a new fuzz circuit! It almost sounds a little different than the last fifty fuzz circuits I designed! ;)

slashandburn

Very interesting, thanks!  Clears up some of the 386 opamp/power amp debate I've seen and been a little confused with.

Johan

You know. When the day comes, you could probably build a discrete one from the schematic in the data sheet. . It's Not that many parts....wouldn't that be cool? ..
DON'T PANIC

Mark Hammer

Given the ubiquity of the 386, I suspect that, much like stars that died millions of years ago, whose light only reaches us now, we will continue to see "light" from that product line for quite some time.

scratch

thanks to that article I'm now on the hunt to find a quieter headphone amp for my rig ... thought that LM386 noise was just me ...
Denis,
Nothing witty yet ...

PRR

> thanks to that article ... LM386 noise was just me ...

I thought it odd that that article says '386 has poor powerr-crap rejection--- and he is not using the BYPASS pin which is FOR that problem.

However his other data does seem to show there are differences in THD, hiss, and crossover distortion.
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nate77

Mark, that is a very elegant statement.

snap

hold it, boys: lm386 is currently being manufactured ( = active ) : http://www.ti.com/product/lm386/samplebuy# in SMD though!
don`t worry, but improve your soldering skills!

greaser_au

Quote from: snap on October 29, 2014, 03:19:36 AM
hold it, boys: lm386 is currently being manufactured ( = active ) : http://www.ti.com/product/lm386/samplebuy# in SMD though!
don`t worry, but improve your soldering skills!

Now to dig out the SOT-8 -> DIP8 converters for the breadboard....

amptramp

Quote from: snap on October 29, 2014, 03:19:36 AM
hold it, boys: lm386 is currently being manufactured ( = active ) : http://www.ti.com/product/lm386/samplebuy# in SMD though!
don`t worry, but improve your soldering skills!

Do you need an SMD heatsink for it?  I can imagine a number of parts that have no thermal problems in through-hole mount packages but get close to incandescence in a SOT package.

ubersam

Quote from: snap on October 29, 2014, 03:19:36 AM
hold it, boys: lm386 is currently being manufactured ( = active ) : http://www.ti.com/product/lm386/samplebuy# in SMD though!
don`t worry, but improve your soldering skills!
Looks like the DIP8 is also available. Just looked at mouser to check, yup, still there.

snap

Quote from: amptramp on October 29, 2014, 10:40:48 AM
Quote from: snap on October 29, 2014, 03:19:36 AM
hold it, boys: lm386 is currently being manufactured ( = active ) : http://www.ti.com/product/lm386/samplebuy# in SMD though!
don`t worry, but improve your soldering skills!

Do you need an SMD heatsink for it?  I can imagine a number of parts that have no thermal problems in through-hole mount packages but get close to incandescence in a SOT package.

get the answer from the datasheets.

snap

Quote from: ubersam on October 29, 2014, 03:18:28 PM
Quote from: snap on October 29, 2014, 03:19:36 AM
hold it, boys: lm386 is currently being manufactured ( = active ) : http://www.ti.com/product/lm386/samplebuy# in SMD though!
don`t worry, but improve your soldering skills!
Looks like the DIP8 is also available. Just looked at mouser to check, yup, still there.

there`s a difference between (still) available and (still) in production.

ubersam

#18
Quote from: snap on October 31, 2014, 02:38:44 AM
Quote from: ubersam on October 29, 2014, 03:18:28 PM
Quote from: snap on October 29, 2014, 03:19:36 AM
hold it, boys: lm386 is currently being manufactured ( = active ) : http://www.ti.com/product/lm386/samplebuy# in SMD though!
don`t worry, but improve your soldering skills!
Looks like the DIP8 is also available. Just looked at mouser to check, yup, still there.

there`s a difference between (still) available and (still) in production.
Correct. But if you look at the table the link directs to, the NOPB versions of the PDIPs are still "Active" under the "Status" heading. I take that as being (still) in production.


EATyourGuitar

leave it for the cheapo practice amps. every fuzz I ever tried with an LM386 was mostly shit. The parallel universe for example is prone to create power problems for other pedals. it is basically a power hungry clock running in the same audio range as your guitar. they had to use pcb mounted jacks and ground plane just to make it passable as a noisemaker. lets be honest, its a power amp. when you abuse it you play with fire.
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