| Manufacturer | Part Number | Capacitance | Voltage | Dielectric | Package | |--------------|-------------|-------------|---------|------------|---------| | AVX | 06035C102KAT2A | 1000 pF ±10% | 50V | X7R | 0603 | | Murata | GCM188R71H102KA37 | 1000 pF ±10% | 50V | X7R | 0603 | | KEMET | C0603C102K5RACTU | 1000 pF ±10% | 50V | X7R | 0603 | | TDK | C1608X7R1H102K | 1000 pF ±10% | 50V | X7R | 0603 | | Yageo | CC0603KRX7R9BB102 | 1000 pF ±10% | 50V | X7R | 0603 |
is an integrated circuit (IC) part number typically associated with the 9e102 datasheet
: In heavy machinery (such as cranes), "9E102" is sometimes found in technical documentation as a specific wire marking or auxiliary circuit designation. Where to Find the Full Datasheet | Manufacturer | Part Number | Capacitance |
Yes. 1000 pF = 0.001 µF = 1 nF. All are identical. However, ensure voltage rating and dielectric match (X7R vs. C0G vs. Y5V). Y5V has poor temperature stability and should not be a direct replacement in precision circuits. All are identical
Look at the physical component. Is there a logo (circle, square, letters like "M", "T", "P") next to the number? That will help identify the real manufacturer.
The rest was blank. No voltages, no timing diagrams, no pinouts—only a single hand-drawn schematic that ended in an ellipsis as if the diagram had trailed off into a thought. Someone had rationalized mystery by naming it a part. Somewhere, someone still believed that labeling could contain the unruly.