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On Sep 24, 4:11*pm, Syl wrote:
John Byrns a crit : In article , Syl wrote: John Byrns wrote: In article , Syl wrote: Franc Zabkar a crit : On Tue, 23 Sep 2008 18:24:47 -0400, "hifi-tek" put finger to keyboard and composed: I'd say that 8112 is a YYWW date code. It is a YYMM date code. Then how do you account for the "32" in "235-8532K"? It IS YYWW (that is year and week) so....235-8532 means 1985, 32nd week. That is why the K is there... I agree that it is YYWW, but I don't understand what you are saying the reason is that the "K" is there? *Why is the "K" there? weeK, to avoid any possible confusion to the date format used. That's where I figured you were headed with the "K", but typically the YYWW date code, as used on semiconductors for example, is used without a format indicator, in fact IIRC some versions of the YYWW date code scramble the digits in one way or another to obscure their meaning. I wonder if the "K" might not have another meaning, such as a code to indicate which of several factories the device was produced in? *If that is the case, the fact that "K" is the last letter in "week" might just be a coincidence. Could well be but so far only found K and was told so. I was also told the first 3 digits where the factory ID, can anyone confirm this? Q: to OP. What country of origin is the cap from? Could it be a code for country of origin? Like Canada, US... Syl- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I used to make a living selling P.R. Mallory the 3 digit code is the manufacturer, 274 is/was RCA. And 235 is/was Mallory. Ole P.R Mallory used to snap up companies like RMC and Duracell. When he retired they started selling off all those companies. 73 OM n8zu |
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