It's pretty small, alright. The pin spacing is .1". Here's a photo using some .1" protoboard as a backdrop, and shaded to show the mounting footprint. Except for not being upside down, the oscillator is positioned as in my previous post -- ie; the overall footprint is in "landscape" orientation, and the oscillator is rotated portrait-wise.
Although my adapter is implemented as a removable daughterboard, the same wiring technique could mount the oscillator directly to the main board.
Attachment:
oscillator scale.JPG [ 223.92 KiB | Viewed 590 times ]
The shot below shows the oscillator in its natural (SMD) habitat.
If you're doing a custom PCB (not protoboard) then this is the way to go. On this board the plate-through holes are on a .1" grid, and the SOIC IC location is .050" lead pitch. For scale I put a rectangular can-type oscillator on the left, with its narrow dimension visible.
Attachment:
oscillator comparison.JPG [ 328.19 KiB | Viewed 590 times ]
It's worth mentioning that suppliers have less and less incentive to stock through-hole parts nowadays. So, as time goes by, you're more and more likely to find your favorite frequency only available in SMD.
-- Jeff
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In 1988 my 65C02 got six new registers and 44 new full-speed instructions!
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