Basically I am building a circuit but one of the transistors I have (BC547) did not come with the leg arrangement labelled. I have checked online data sheets but each one has says something different. I have a digital multimeter at home with sockets for transistor legs labelled E, B, C.
Is there an easy way using the meter that I can check to see what leg is what please?
Basically I am building a circuit but one of the transistors I have (BC547) did not come with the leg arrangement labelled. I have checked online data sheets but each one has says something different. I have a digital multimeter at home with sockets for transistor legs labelled E, B, C.
Is there an easy way using the meter that I can check to see what leg is what please?
Hi I bought it from Maplin but couldn't see a manufacturer logo on it. I would like to make sure using the multimeter because I've been having problems with the circuit and this transistor plays a key role in doing what I want to achieve.
Hi I bought it from Maplin but couldn't see a manufacturer logo on it. I would like to make sure using the multimeter because I've been having problems with the circuit and this transistor plays a key role in doing what I want to achieve.
I have little sockets on the multimeter labelled E, B, C so how do I use this feature to find out what leg is what on the transistor? It's been driving me nuts for ages and I can't get my circuit to work without frying each transistor through trial and error!
I have little sockets on the multimeter labelled E, B, C so how do I use this feature to find out what leg is what on the transistor? It's been driving me nuts for ages and I can't get my circuit to work without frying each transistor through trial and error!
I have little sockets on the multimeter labelled E, B, C so how do I use this feature to find out what leg is what on the transistor? It's been driving me nuts for ages and I can't get my circuit to work without frying each transistor through trial and error!
Stick the transistor in the socket and select the 'transistor test' on the multimeter. If your multimeter is anything like my old one, it will display the hfe (gain). Try different positions until you get the highest gain, and then you'll know what the pinout is.
Stick the transistor in the socket and select the 'transistor test' on the multimeter. If your multimeter is anything like my old one, it will display the hfe (gain). Try different positions until you get the highest gain, and then you'll know what the pinout is.
Hi there, so what you're saying is that after experimenting with different leg positions in the multimeter, the arrangement that produces the highest reading on the screen is the correct one?
This is my multimeter - which setting should the dial be on to test the transistor, assuming its an NPN?
Do you see the black outline around the trasistor test socket on your meter, and how the two sides of the line are extended over to the "hFE" switch position? That is the switch position.