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Serge Auckland wrote on 8/27/2006:
Jerry, my own experience this side of the pond backs up Dick's usage. An IC consists of a single piece of silicon onto which the various circuit components (active devices, resistors and, with a little more difficulty, capacitors) are etched. By its very nature, only low value of capacitance can be included, and inductance hardly at all (except for specialist RF circuits) A Hybrid circuit consists of silicon chip devices plus passive components, all attached to a normally ceramic substrate and encapsulated. The passive components can theoretically be of any value, but for space reasons are also normally confined to small values. However, the method of construction of ICs and Hybrids use very different technologies. S. Hi, Serge! Dick, in his normal abrupt fashion expounded, "It's not an IC, it's a hybrid" Turns out, hybrids fall under the definition of IC, ... as a subclass. In my other post, I quoted the ieee approved index for keywords. Unless someone objects to the ieee approved keyword index, I think we can conclude things are NOT always "black and white" and no one person "knows it all". Regards, Jerry |
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