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05:42
@ThePhoton Die on board! Chip on board?
 
10 hours later…
15:17
I finally got that +100 boost. =)
From the Philosophy SE--hahaha
Ya'all with all your hard science SE, and Parenting SE...ha
 
2 hours later…
16:57
@W5VO . .you can satisfy some of the people all of the time. All of the people some of the time. And satisfy Olin none of the time.
17:43
@NickAlexeev That's a legitimate possibility. Any idea which op-amp vendors supply bare die?
I am a bit sick of not being able to just buy the capacitor I want for my design.
17:59
@ThePhoton I know TI does, you can even buy (order?) bare die from Digikey
@W5VO How do you find those parts? Or do you have to call Digikey on the phone?
@ThePhoton Select "Die" from the "Package/Case" selection list
@ThePhoton Just about any silicon supplier can sell you wafer or die on tape. Microchip sells wafer and die (although I don't know who you'd need to contact on the inside). You will also need to get the assembly house (which will be assembling the CoB) in a design review.
@NickAlexeev can and will are sometimes a big difference
@NickAlexeev There's actually already COB on this design.
18:07
@W5VO I know. I've had a "sell me a wafer" conversation one time. This difference is somewhat smaller, when one is backed by a big [and notorious] company.
SemiDice will sell you bare die
@NickAlexeev Did you downvote this? electronics.stackexchange.com/questions/392526/…
On a different note, what kind of redneck would use the word "Amps [literally]" in a datasheet?.. — Nick Alexeev ♦ 8 mins ago
Apparently Carling Technologies, from CT
@NickAlexeev Power guys can be pretty red necked.
@W5VO That's New England. That ain't redneck country.
18:11
@NickAlexeev I mean, the guy asking the question copied the text verbatim from the datasheet
I don't see why downvoting the question is necessary.
I've looked at the datasheet, and I don't know the answer to the question.
If you have to know the answer to the question before you ask the question, what's the point?
Preliminary research is missing from the question. The definition for Full Load Current (FLA) is there on teh webz.
The O.P. doesn't explain what he's trying to accomplish.
@NickAlexeev No no, it's Full Load Amps
@NickAlexeev So what's the difference between Full Load Amps, and General Amps?
JRE
JRE
18:51
@NickAlexeev A whole boatload of people and companies, given the number of hits google delivers for "full load amps." It appears to be a common expression when discussing large electrical motors.

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