🔧 Elevate your electronics game with 2N5457 – where precision meets power!
The 2N5457 is a high-performance N-channel JFET transistor featuring a 25V drain-gate voltage and 10mA gate current. Its interchangeable drain and source pins, combined with high AC/DC input impedance and low capacitance, make it ideal for DIY projects, low-level audio amplifiers, and analog switching applications. Packaged in a user-friendly set of 10, it’s engineered for both experimentation and professional use.
A**S
The one I tried worked
The one I tried worked. I had to look up the pin-out -- with leads down and the angled sides facing you (the flat side facing away from you), the left is +5VDC, middle is GND and the right is the output. Nominal output is 2.5VDC with no magnetic field. The direction of the output changed when the magnet was reversed. With just one 1/4" diameter disk magnet, the voltage range was 4.24V and the low was 0.80V with the magnet at the sensor; with two magnets the low went to 0.75V, the high was the same.With the two magnets, the output changed by 0.001V about 6 inches but remained that way until about 1/2 inch where the voltage was about 2.63 volts -- 0.13V change. A 3-inch stack of magnets was 2.68V. A 1 inch disk magnet gave 3.25V at 1/2 inch and 2.75V at 1 inch distance. At 2 inches the 1-inch magnet gave a change of 0.04V from the 2.5V nominal.
I**Y
Because Sometimes You Just Need a Workhorse
Let’s be real—there are sleeker, more efficient transistors out there… but the TIP31C? It’s the Chevy 350 small-block of general-purpose BJTs. It’s rugged, it’s simple, and it’ll push through heat, current, and amateur mistakes like a champ.I grabbed a pack of these to throw into:A DIY audio amplifier project (classic transistor push-pull),A linear power supply I was repairing,And even a high-power LED dimmer test circuit—and yep, it handled it all just fine.The C variant means it’s the high-voltage version of the TIP31 line—can handle up to 100V and 3A if you’ve got a decent heat sink strapped on. Great for switching, signal amplification, and good ol' analog control circuits. If you’re into learning by building, this one’s your friend.Why It Slaps:TO-220 package = easy to mount, easy to cool, breadboard-friendly (with a breakout)Handles high voltage & current loads without blinking (with proper thermal planning)Works great for PWM, amplifiers, relays, motors, and LED banksCheap and available—perfect for experimenting and prototypingWhat Could Be Better:Needs a good heat sink at anything over 1A—this thing will get toastyBJT means base current draw—if you're coming from MOSFETs, plan your resistorsNo extras in the packaging—no mounting hardware, no datasheet (but hey, it’s online)TL;DR:The ALLECIN TIP31C is a tough, no-frills NPN silicon power transistor for your mid-to-high power needs. It’s not fancy. It’s not surface mount. But it’s reliable, affordable, and ready for abuse—which makes it a perfect staple for DIY electronics and educational builds.It’s the kind of transistor that forgives your mistakes and teaches you something.
K**J
Seems genuine component, test ok
Tested all 10 for gate threshold and Rdson after receiving counterfeit product from different vendor. These seem genuine and all work just fine.
T**N
They work for my needs
I'm uncertain if these are genuinely 2N5457 transistors, but they work for what I need.
N**S
calidad
Los remplace en mi TV y funciono perfecto
C**.
These read magnetic fields, and are really sensitive
I used mine in a joystick along with magnets. Super fine positioning in the magnetic field, much better than potentiometers!
P**B
Installed in a ham transceiver, and it works well.
I acquired a non-working transceiver that had some "substitutions" installed for the pair of RF final output FETs by a previous "tech". Although the "touted-as-heavier-duty" output FETs WERE rated slightly more "power", they were rated for 55V instead of the 100V rating of the IRF-520s. Too much RF voltage peaks are likely what killed the "substitutions". In many cases it is best to trust the design engineers, and stick with the OEM part number that the service manual calls for. Just my opinion, of course. These worked well for me (careful bias adjustments were also done to ensure long-term reliability)
S**B
Rubbish
Source-Drain Resistance (RDSon) is much higher than it should be. The spec is 0.02 Ohms, but I measured about 10x higher than this. Makes the part pretty much useless at the currents it is designed to work with.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
4 days ago