DS2125+

DS2125+

Compare
DS2125+
SCSI TERMINATOR, 15-LINE, 110OHM
Compare

$3.24

Price update:a months ago
Available in stock: 1070
45
Serves customers in 45 countries
1000+
Worldwide Manufacturers
$140M
$140M Growth in 5 Years
50.0M+
50M Parts Shipped in 5 Years
Dallas Semiconductor

Dallas Semiconductor

Dallas Semiconductor, acquired by Maxim Integrated in 2002 for $2.5 billion,then acquired by Analog Devices in 2021, was a company that designed and manufactured analog, digital, and mixed-signal semiconductors (integrated circuits, or ICs). Its specialties included communications products (including T/E and Ethernet products), microcontrollers, battery management, thermal sensing and thermal management, non-volatile random-access memory, microprocessor supervisors, delay lines, silicon oscillators, digital potentiometers, real-time clocks, temperature-compensated crystal oscillators (TCXOs), iButton, and 1-Wire products.

View All Product from Dallas Semiconductor
DS2125+ Products

Product Attributes

TYPE DESCRIPTION Select all
Package Tube
Supplier Device Package 48-LQFP (7x7)
Package / Case 48-LQFP
Mounting Type Surface Mount
Operating Temperature 0°C ~ 70°C
Voltage - Supply 2.7V ~ 5.5V
Number of Terminations 15
Type SCSI, LVD, SE
Product Status Obsolete

Blog

$3.24

Price update:a months ago
Available in stock: 1070
Dallas Semiconductor

Dallas Semiconductor

Dallas Semiconductor, acquired by Maxim Integrated in 2002 for $2.5 billion,then acquired by Analog Devices in 2021, was a company that designed and manufactured analog, digital, and mixed-signal semiconductors (integrated circuits, or ICs). Its specialties included communications products (including T/E and Ethernet products), microcontrollers, battery management, thermal sensing and thermal management, non-volatile random-access memory, microprocessor supervisors, delay lines, silicon oscillators, digital potentiometers, real-time clocks, temperature-compensated crystal oscillators (TCXOs), iButton, and 1-Wire products.

View All Product from Dallas Semiconductor

Blog