I need to track down a replacement for the MPSU95...which is apparently rare as frog hairs. MCM lists it but I *will not* pay 35$ for it. Its out of the EQ section of a Messy Booger Mark II....a leg broke off it right at the pkg. Takers?
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MPSU95 sub?
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AH geez.
That is the only PNP darlington in that case 152 package, from Moto anyway.
Look up D40K4. That is a TO202, sort of a big brother to the 152. Same pinout I think.2
At small currents - which I believe the boogie circuit to be - it has a gain of 10,000, which is remotely in the ballpark. I think the MPSU95 is about twice that.
And you might be the only guy here to get this - I THINK the D40K was the transistor on the little board on the side of the Deltronics ticket dispenser. Got any of those?
And the pinout is wrong, but a TO220 TIP105/106/107 might even work. They have gain as high as 20,000.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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I get it I know them well. Don't have any or access to them anymore. I was thinking the WG color X-Y monitor deflection boards might have them but it was in appearance only. OK then.....off to search the parts boards.......The farmer takes a wife, the barber takes a pole....
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Did you try Mesa and ask what they use? Best thing to do is ask for the tech that works on those amps. They are very friendly people there and I have found them to extremely helpful...in fact there's a guy named George there that will literally talk your ear off for hours if you let him. Fortunately he's also a fountain of knowledge when it comes to MB products.
Don't try and call on a Friday though. I think they still work a 4 day work week.
BTW This place has them for $20
http://store.americanmicrosemiconductor.com/mpsu95.html
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Try Central Semiconductor - http://www.centralsemi.com/. They make many obsolete solidstate devices and their catalog has a PNP darlington part # CEN-U95. I can not find a PIN out but you could call them and get a few samples.
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American Semi has been very good for obsolete and oddball stuff. So have Futurlec and B & D Enterprises.
$20 bucks might seem like a heavy hit for a single transistor and some people might rig it. I have a penchant for being as close to original as possible in special cases like these. But hey, if the more common MPSA63 is is the suggested replacement (albeit in a TO-92 case), then go for it.
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