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- Why Engineers Are Switching to the LSBF862 and Not Looking Back
When NXP Semiconductors discontinued the BF862, most engineers didn’t just lose a part, they lost a go-to solution they trusted in critical designs. What we’re seeing now is interesting. Teams aren’t just replacing it… they’re upgrading. The LSBF862 is quickly becoming the preferred choice not only for legacy BF862 designs, but for entirely new designs where low noise and stability actually matter. Here’s why 👇 A lot of replacements technically work. But in ultra-low-noise circuits, “good enough” usually isn’t. Designers working on precision front ends, photodiode and TIA stages, hydrophones, acoustic sensing, and low-level signal amplification are finding that the LSBF862 delivers a cleaner signal floor and more predictable performance without needing to rework their entire design. One of the quiet advantages is the higher voltage capability. With a 40V BVGSS minimum, engineers get more headroom in their designs, more flexibility in biasing, and added protection against edge-case failures that can show up later in the field. It’s also not just a replacement, it’s tunable. We’re seeing more teams take advantage of IDSS selection and Vgs(off) customization to dial in performance for their specific application instead of designing around fixed parameters. That’s something most drop-in replacements simply don’t offer. We’re seeing the LSBF862 show up in low-noise amplifiers, discrete op amp designs, high-impedance sensor interfaces, audio circuits, and test and measurement systems. Basically, anywhere the BF862 used to be, and anywhere performance really matters. The biggest shift we’re hearing from engineers is this: they don’t want to redesign again in a few years. That’s why long-term availability matters just as much as performance. At Linear Systems, we don’t discontinue parts. If it’s in our lineup, it’s supported for the long term. If you’re evaluating alternatives or starting a new design, the LSBF862 is worth a closer look. Samples and datasheets available here: Contact Us
- A Discrete Design for a Guitar Compressor
“8 years were spent working with, and listening to, a cadre of guitarists debating various pedal sound effects. Most debated was the lowly Compressor. Orange squeezer, MXR Dynacomp, Ross, Boss, and on and on. The simplest of all were those like the Ross compressor with a CA3080 OTL IC, (operational transconductance amp) used as a variable gain amp for leveling the transient amplitude input of an electric guitar. These designs had a couple drawbacks, being, to slow of an attack and distortion from the OTL being initially differentially overdriven. A correction might include phase control, linearization of the OTL input and a cleaner OTL. To settle the OTL style debate a discrete electronic approach was built; it incorporates a JFET input impedance buffer presenting no appreciable load to the guitar, a pair of biased diodes to AC linearize and precompress the OTL input, a discrete OTL amp using matched dual Linear Sys transistor pairs and high gain Linear Sys Bipolars for the compressor control. The final circuit having over 20db of compression range proved to be significantly quieter, had little “Pop” in the attack, and much less initial compression distortion lending to a more musically friendly sound. Using combinations of Linear Systems dual and single JFETs and the array of low noise dual Bipolar transistors allows all of my audio designs to perform to the highest level expected and in the blind shootout test of 5 OTL candidates at Upstairs Amps and Brawer Guitar, this design was remarked as , “ Yeah, that’s what I’m Talkin about!”. Feedback on this is always appreciated.” - Kirkwood Rough Designs like this highlight what’s possible with low-noise JFETs and precision-matched pairs. If you’re working on audio circuits, Linear Systems JFETs are a great place to start. Request samples HERE.
- Improving Bandwidth in Photodiode Amplifiers with the LSK489 Ultra-Low Noise, Low Capacitance Dual JFET
Designing high-speed photodiode and sensor front ends often comes down to one limiting factor: input capacitance. Even when noise performance is optimized, excess capacitance at the input can restrict bandwidth, slow response time, and introduce distortion. For engineers working with precision optical or sensor signals, this creates a constant tradeoff between speed, stability, and complexity. In photodiode and high-impedance sensor circuits, total input capacitance directly impacts: Bandwidth limitations Stability of transimpedance amplifiers Increased settling time Higher distortion at higher frequencies Many traditional dual JFET solutions introduce 20–25 pF of input capacitance, forcing designers to compensate with additional components, more complex layouts, and performance compromises. Reducing input capacitance allows designers to: Increase bandwidth without redesigning the entire front end Improve stability with less compensation Reduce intermodulation distortion Simplify circuit design This is especially critical in applications like photodiode amplifiers, optical sensing systems, medical instrumentation, and precision measurement equipment. The LSK489 dual N-channel JFET was designed specifically to address these challenges. It combines ultra-low noise performance with exceptionally low input capacitance of just 4 pF typical, enabling faster and more efficient signal handling in high-speed designs. Key characteristics include: Ultra-low input capacitance: 4 pF typ Low noise: 1.8 nV/√Hz typ High CMRR: 102 dB Tight matching from monolithic dual construction By reducing input capacitance by a factor of 5–6× compared to typical dual JFETs, the LSK489 enables: Higher bandwidth without sacrificing noise performance Faster settling time in precision measurement systems Improved signal fidelity in high-frequency applications Simpler circuits with fewer compensation components In many cases, designers can achieve better performance with fewer parts, reducing both cost and design complexity. One of the biggest advantages of the LSK489 is how it enables more elegant circuit designs. Instead of adding compensation networks to manage capacitance, designers can start with a device that minimizes the problem at the source. For high-speed, low-noise designs, capacitance is often the hidden bottleneck. The LSK489 removes that limitation by delivering ultra-low input capacitance while maintaining the precision and matching expected from a dual JFET. The result is faster, cleaner, and simpler analog designs. Want to learn more? Visit the LSK489 product page by clicking HERE ! #AnalogDesign #JFET #ElectronicsEngineering #Photodiode #SensorDesign #LowNoise #HighSpeedDesign #Semiconductors #HardwareEngineering #Instrumentation
- A Radio Frequency RMS Metering Circuit
RF Engineers know that temperature effects matter in RF measurement. This constant temperature substitution design tackles that challenge in a clever way using pico-amp diodes. JFET Design Spotlight - A Radio Frequency RMS Metering Circuit “When Linear Technology introduced the LT1088 RMS converter, it was packaged in a complicated iso-thermal DIP package to allow the published RMS measuring circuit application some working room. The problem with that application was temperature increasing with measured power allowing only limited precision and repeatability over environmental temperature fluctuations. However, by using the additional concentric 250Ω resistors, another control option was obviously available creating possible constant temperature operation regardless of input power measured. Here, the 250Ω resistors raise the Die temperature to about 40°-60°C where any additional thermal influence of incoming RF can be substitute balanced by complimentary reduction of the 250Ω power input. Common mode voltage of the LT1088 D1&D4 diodes sets the temperature and differentially balances out the input RF at 50Ω with a DC equivalent power at 50Ω. The Voltage across D1&D4 are therefore constant for the input measurement range of 80mW. I talked Jim Williams out of some plastic packaged LT1088’s to prove that the expense of isothermal packaging was unnecessary. Accuracy improved over 10-fold from the original application circuit. As is the case for many of these instrument circuits, Clamp and level fixing diodes used with FET input Op-Amps by habit use pico-amp diodes like the LIS PAD-1‘s. By the way, Dual PAD pico-amp diodes have a little known feature of exhibiting significantly less nodal leakage than the Datasheet illustrates when used in symmetrical clamp bias function as shown in the earlier published 10Kv amplifier protection. These on DIE diode pairs function similarly to the gate bias cancellation of dual pico-amp JFET’s illustrated in the Accelerometer circuit presented earlier. Close proximity allows uniform doping distribution and nearly perfect matching for Dual PAD diode parts so symmetric bias currents balance to near nothing. For me, it’s a time-tested habit.” Kirkwood Rough Why this matters: Improved measurement accuracy through thermal stability Symmetrical diode behavior enables ultra-low leakage performance A great example of where Linear Systems PAD pico-amp diodes shine Looking for ultra-low leakage diode solutions for your next design? Our PAD series offers exceptional matching and performance for precision analog and RF applications. Have you used pico-amp diodes in similar circuits or solved temperature stability challenges in a different way? Share your experience in the comments. Learn more and request samples in the comments. #AnalogDesign #RFEngineering #JFET #ElectronicsDesign #LowNoise #Semiconductors #LinearSystems
- Struggling with Obsolete Parts? How Engineers Are Solving It
Every engineer has faced it at some point: a critical component in your design is suddenly obsolete, unavailable, or impossible to source reliably. And unlike digital systems, analog designs don’t always give you the luxury of a quick swap. So what do you do when a key part disappears? Why Obsolescence Hits Analog Designs Harder In digital design, you can often work around a part change with firmware or minor adjustments. In analog circuits, even small parameter differences can create real problems. Things like noise performance, matching, leakage current, and biasing behavior are tightly tied to how the circuit performs. A “close enough” replacement can easily lead to increased noise, drift in operating points, degraded signal integrity, or even a full redesign. What Engineers Are Running Into Right Now From conversations with engineers and customers, a few patterns come up consistently. Legacy parts are disappearing, especially widely used JFETs and small-signal devices. Supply is often unpredictable, with long lead times or inconsistent availability. Secondary markets introduce risk, including counterfeit or non-conforming parts. And in many cases, redesign simply isn’t practical, especially for long-life or regulated systems. How Engineers Are Solving It The teams navigating this best are taking a more strategic approach. They start by focusing on the parameters that actually matter in their circuit, such as noise, gm, leakage, and matching, rather than just looking for a “similar” part on paper. They also look to modern equivalents designed to replace legacy components, often improving consistency and long-term availability. In many cases, the replacement ends up being an upgrade rather than just a workaround. Validation is critical. Simulation helps, but real confidence comes from testing in-circuit, verifying biasing, and measuring actual performance. And importantly, they’re not doing it alone. Working directly with manufacturers who understand legacy components and application behavior can significantly reduce risk and speed up the process. A Shift in Mindset The most successful teams don’t just react to obsolescence. They use it as an opportunity to improve performance, reduce future supply risk, and strengthen their designs overall. It’s not just about replacing a part. It’s about making the design more robust long term. How We’re Helping Engineers Navigate This At Linear Systems, we work with engineers every day who are dealing with obsolete JFETs, hard-to-source components, and performance-sensitive designs. We help identify strong replacement options, provide cross reference guidance, supply samples for evaluation, and support real-world validation. The goal is simple: help you keep your design performing the way it should. Need Help with an Obsolete Part? If you’re dealing with a part that’s no longer available or becoming difficult to source, we’re happy to help. Drop the part number or application in the comments or message me directly and we’ll point you in the right direction. Quick Question What’s the biggest challenge you face with obsolete components? Finding a true replacement, maintaining performance, supply chain reliability, or avoiding redesign? #AnalogDesign #ElectronicsEngineering #Semiconductors #JFET #Obsolescence #HardwareEngineering #EE #ProductDesign #SupplyChain
- Linear Systems Releases SPICE Model for the PAD Series Low-Leakage Diode
Linear Systems is pleased to announce the release of a new SPICE model for the PAD Series low-leakage diode, developed by our engineering team. This model enables designers to simulate the SSTPAD10 in LTspice and other SPICE-compatible simulators, supporting faster circuit development and more accurate performance evaluation. The PAD Series of low-leakage diodes was designed for precision applications where minimizing leakage current and maintaining stable capacitance are critical. Its performance makes it well suited for sensitive analog circuits and high-impedance signal paths. 🔗 Explore the PAD Series Typical applications include: Precision instrumentation Low-noise analog front ends Protection circuits High-impedance signal paths Test and measurement systems The PAD Series offers controlled junction capacitance, low leakage characteristics, and stable breakdown performance, making it a reliable choice for both new designs and performance-critical applications. Providing SPICE models allows engineers to evaluate device behavior early in the design process and integrate Linear Systems components with greater confidence. We will continue expanding our SPICE model library to support additional Linear Systems devices. 📥 Download SPICE Model ( Link to SPICE model file ) 💬 Stay Connected Follow Linear Systems for new device releases, SPICE models, and application insights.
- JFET Design Spotlight - Audio Amplifiers
“Audio amplifiers are many and varied. Ones used for music should have a very low intermodulation distortion and when overdriven should produce a minimum of odd alien sounds. Class A amplifiers tend to be preferred over most for their “warm” and realistic sound presence. Though not efficient, The Class A and class AB1 often fit this category for the most part. Class B amplifiers are more efficient but have a nasty problem with the impedance shift at zero crossover. Here is a variation in thinking that merges both types of design. Though having a class B output with complimentary devices exclusively drawing current from their respective rails, an output stage bias is always on allowing complimentary emitters to operate with no series resistor and is thus designated as Class BA. As with most sound worthy amps, the input stage is a Low Noise differential pair of Linear Systems LSK389A JFETs. Output offset is <10mV and can be dialed to 0.0V with a small offset Pot. This circuit is inspired by an instrument buffer circuit circa: 1957 of Henry Hall and Bob Fulks at General Radio Co.” – Kirkwood Rough Interested in designing with the LSK389A ? Explore the device details and request your free samples today .
- Linear Systems Releases First SPICE Model for the VCR11N Voltage-Controlled Resistor
Linear Systems is pleased to announce the release of the first SPICE model for the VCR11N, developed by our engineer Allan Cabiluna. This new model allows designers to simulate the VCR11N voltage-controlled resistor in LTspice and other SPICE-compatible simulators, enabling faster circuit development and performance evaluation. The VCR11N is an N-channel JFET designed for use as a voltage-controlled resistor, allowing the drain-source resistance to be adjusted using gate voltage. This makes it ideal for applications requiring precise signal attenuation and gain control. Typical applications include: Amplifier gain control Oscillator amplitude stabilization Programmable attenuators Analog signal processing Filter tuning The device is designed for low-level AC signals with no DC component, providing predictable RDS variation with VGS control and allowing it to operate as a symmetrical resistor with no DC bias in the signal loop. The VCR11N is also a pin-for-pin replacement for the Siliconix VCR11N, supporting both legacy designs and new circuit development. Providing SPICE models helps engineers evaluate performance early in the design cycle and integrate Linear Systems devices with greater confidence. We plan to expand our SPICE model library to support additional Linear Systems devices in the future. spice .MODEL VCR11N_UPDATED NJF( + VTO=-9.29 BETA=3.36E-4 VTOTC=-2.2m + BETATCE=-0.5 LAMBDA=1E-4 RD=46.2 RS=46.2 + IS=1E-14 ISR=1E-13 N=1.0 NR=2.0 XTI=3.0 BVK=80.0 IBV=10U + ALPHA=1E-3 VK=0.7 CGS=7.5P CGD=7.5P + PB=1.0 M=0.5 MJ=0.5 FC=0.5 + KF=1E-17 AF=1 GDSNOI=1.0 NLEV=2 + TNOM=27 + MFG=Linear_Systems Learn more about the VCR11N and access the datasheet and product details here: https://www.linearsystems.com/voltagecontrolledresistors/vcr11n
- Ultra-Low-Noise JFETs Explained
A Design Guide to the LSK389 Dual and LSK170 Single JFETs When designing ultra-low-noise analog front ends, device selection matters. Whether you're building instrumentation, audio, or sensing systems, the transistor you choose can directly impact signal integrity, stability, and overall system performance. Two of the most trusted solutions for engineers worldwide are the LSK389 dual JFET and LSK170 single JFET — precision components engineered for applications where noise, matching, and reliability cannot be compromised. Why Engineers Still Choose JFET Front Ends JFETs continue to dominate critical signal paths because they offer: extremely low noise floors ultra-high input impedance predictable biasing behavior excellent linearity For sensitive measurement or audio circuits, these characteristics are often essential — not optional. LSK389 — Matched Dual JFET on a Single Die The LSK389 eliminates one of analog design’s biggest challenges: matching discrete transistors. Because both JFETs are fabricated on the same piece of silicon, designers get: tight electrical matching excellent thermal tracking long-term stability Key Performance Highlights 1.6 nV/√Hz noise (typical @ 1 kHz) 20 mS transconductance (typical) 15 mV max VGS offset matching 40 V breakdown voltage This monolithic architecture provides tighter performance than hand-matching discrete devices while reducing design time and cost. LSK170 — Benchmark Single Ultra-Low-Noise JFET The LSK170 is designed for applications that require the lowest possible noise from a single device. Key Performance Highlights 0.9 nV/√Hz noise (typical @ 1 kHz) ~20 GΩ input impedance 22 mS transconductance (typical) ≤22 pF capacitance It’s also a direct replacement for the classic 2SK170 , making it ideal for legacy upgrades or modern redesigns. When to Use Each Device Choose LSK389 if your design needs: differential input stages matched pairs precision instrumentation Choose LSK170 if your design needs: lowest single-device noise ultra-high impedance inputs compact layouts Typical Applications These devices are widely used in: microphone preamps sensor interfaces instrumentation amplifiers hydrophones and acoustic detection medical electronics test and measurement systems Design Insight Engineers Appreciate Narrow IDSS grading means less biasing guesswork and more predictable circuit performance, especially in low-voltage or battery-powered systems. That translates directly into: ✔ faster prototypes✔ fewer revisions✔ more consistent production results Need Help Choosing the Right Grade? Linear Integrated Systems offers custom screening options and technical support to help you select the optimal device for your design. 📩 Contact our engineering team: support@linearsystems.com
- JFET Guitar Wah Pedal — Look Ma, No Inductors!
JFET Design Spotlight 🎸 “JFET Guitar Wah Pedal — Look Ma, No Inductors!” The variable band pass filter for musical voicing effects most notably, the Cry Baby from VOX, became famously known as a WAH Pedal. The original WAH used a 500mH inductor in a feedback loop to produce a variable filter with foot-pedal potentiometer activation. Issues with this pedal were, few were much alike. This design variation of the WAH effect is to eliminate the inductor having varied Q’s making most all Wah Pedals different. By substituting a bandpass filter designed at General Radio by Henry Hall in 1952 for Null Meters, a more uniform distributed gain over frequency could be realized. Incorporation of this technique makes for an unusually clean sweep and low noise effect for Lead Guitar, Bass, with 3 capacitor swaps, and any other Funkadelic need worth messing with. The Linear Systems LSK389s make implementation of this low loop gain JFET OP-Amp remarkably linear and highly musical. Loop gain may be cheap but doesn’t necessarily sound good. For Audio, Linearity certainly does!” Kirkwood Rough JFET Guitar Wah Pedal JFET Guitar Wah Plot What’s your preference for tone shaping — classic inductor wah or active filter designs? How can we help you? If you have questions, need technical information, samples, etc.: Contact Us !
- TEMPERATURE COMPENSATED JFET CAPACITIVE ACCELEROMETER AMPLIFIER
“An accelerometer is typically a capacitive transducer and varies Cacc with acceleration rate. A common problem with resident current fed accelerometer preamps is excessive DC offset drift when used up to 100 C. The object here was to keep the output bias voltage within +/- 25% of the 10-volt setting. The LS5906 Low bias Dual JFET addresses this temperature dependency by a unique internal DIE coupling in its construction. In this circuit, compensation of J1’s gate current over temperature happens by an inter-DIE Gate/Substrate coupling current where J2’s gate/drain junction is negative relative to J1’s gate where J1’s Gate current relates to the positive end of the drain channel. The JFETs close proximity on a common DIE assures uniform doping distribution and results in equal junction characteristics. By setting both FETs to have approximately the same Vgd, Gate currents are nearly the same and with opposed junctions, will null out an operating bias current of the active FET over a wide range of temperature. Normal doubling of leakage in silicon every 7 C is then reduced to less than a few percent. Though there is a lot of latitude to modify the dual JFETs Vgd balance for even better performance, this circuit satisfied an immediate requirement and was refined no further. Tests were successful up to 100 C. However, the principle of balanced opposing gate currents for temperature compensation here should be noted for other possible single ended designs where gate current temperature drift is a critical issue.” - Kirkwood Rough What are your thoughts on using balanced opposing JFET gate currents to mitigate temperature drift? Interested in samples of the LS5906 or another Linear Systems part? 🔗 Request samples here: https://www.linearsystems.com/about-2
- Simple 4-20mA current Sense Readout
Elegant analog design often comes down to simplicity. This 4–20 mA current-sense circuit shows how a single JFET can do the job with minimal parts. "Sometimes the simplest solution is the best. Using a single N channel JFET as a current sink, a 4-20mA instrument monitor loop can be read with a minimum of components. A 2N4392 diverts a current of 4mA until the load circuit voltage exceeds the Zener threshold where the remaining current up to 20 mA is diverted giving a linear indication from 4-20mA. Given that the two-wire polarity is known, the Bridge rectifier can be eliminated, further simplifying the circuit. The bridge simply makes it fool proof...." - Kirkwood Rough











