During the middle of the 20th century, a fairly consistent type-designation system had evolved for vacuum tube types, so I've wondered why, when transistors became commercially available, so many companies in the 1960s had transistors marked only with their own in-house parts numbers, making it very difficult to figure out what a standard replacement should be.
I'm well aware that many transistors are broadly interchangeable, but there are situations, like in combo organ dividers, where certain characteristics are important for them to work properly in the circuit.
I guess I may be able to answer my own question in that, perhaps, manufacturers wanted people doing repairs to have to buy replacement parts only from the manufacturer and wanted to make copying their circuits difficult. I'm sure that they neither foresaw nor cared that techs 40 years later would be trying to figure out how to fix their products--and scratching their head over dead-end proprietary parts numbering systems in the process.
I realize that a standard type designation system for tubes was necessary since they do wear out, but the transistors, especially the early ones, were hardly that much better and were more vulnerable to things like voltage spikes than tubes.
I'm well aware that many transistors are broadly interchangeable, but there are situations, like in combo organ dividers, where certain characteristics are important for them to work properly in the circuit.
I guess I may be able to answer my own question in that, perhaps, manufacturers wanted people doing repairs to have to buy replacement parts only from the manufacturer and wanted to make copying their circuits difficult. I'm sure that they neither foresaw nor cared that techs 40 years later would be trying to figure out how to fix their products--and scratching their head over dead-end proprietary parts numbering systems in the process.
I realize that a standard type designation system for tubes was necessary since they do wear out, but the transistors, especially the early ones, were hardly that much better and were more vulnerable to things like voltage spikes than tubes.
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