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73403-5115

Molex

73403-5115 by Molex

RF SMB/SSMB Connectors; Mating Contact Finish: NOT APPLICABLE; Contact Material: NOT APPLICABLE;

Median Price

$2.676

Lifecycle Status

Suppliers In-Stock

3

In-Stock Inventory

1k+

Distributors (Authorized)

Supplier In-Stock 1+ parts 100+ parts 1k+ parts 10k+ parts

Verical

USA . 6,480 parts In-Stock

1+ parts

-

100+ parts

$2.676

1k+ parts

$2.338

10k+ parts

$2.076

6,480

-

$2.676

$2.338

$2.076

Distributors (In-Stock)

Supplier In-Stock 1+ parts 100+ parts 1k+ parts 10k+ parts

Digiode

USA . 762 parts In-Stock

1+ parts

-

100+ parts

-

1k+ parts

-

10k+ parts

-

762

-

-

-

-

Vyrian

USA . 393 parts In-Stock

1+ parts

-

100+ parts

-

1k+ parts

-

10k+ parts

-

393

-

-

-

-

Distributors (Availability)

Supplier In-Stock 1+ parts 100+ parts 1k+ parts 10k+ parts

Andel Nordic

Denmark . 10,045 parts In-Stock

1+ parts

$1.751

100+ parts

-

1k+ parts

$1.681

10k+ parts

$1.681

10,045

$1.751

-

$1.681

$1.681

Corphita

USA . 972 parts In-Stock

1+ parts

-

100+ parts

-

1k+ parts

-

10k+ parts

-

972

-

-

-

-

Technical Specifications

SSMB Connectors 73403-5115 attributes and parameters. Explore more SSMB Connectors devices from Molex

Specs

Mating Contact Finish:

NOT APPLICABLE

Contact Material:

NOT APPLICABLE

Trade Compliance

73403-5115 Connectors trade compliance attributes, and parameters.

ECCN

EAR99

ECCN Governance

EAR

HTS

8536.69.40.10

SB

8536.69.40.10

Manufacturer Highlights

Molex

Molex LLC is a manufacturer of electronic, electrical, and fiber optic connectivity systems. Molex offers over 100,000 products across a variety of industries, including data communications, medical, industrial, automotive and consumer electronics. They are notable for pioneering the Molex connector, which has seen universal adoption in personal computing. The company is considered the second largest electronic connector company in the world. Molex was established in 1938 by Frederick Krehbiel. The company began by making flowerpots out of an industrial byproduct plastic called Molex. Krehbiel developed this material by combining asbestos tailings, coal tar pitch, and limestone. Aside from flower pots, Molex also sold salt shakers before it expanded into electrical connectors and sensors.Later they made connectors for General Electric and other appliance manufacturers out of the same plastic. Molex acquired Woodhead Industries in 2006; the largest acquisition in the former's history at the time.

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