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When Your Component Is Unavailable: Alternates, Last Buys, and Counterfeits

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APPLICATION NOTE When Your Component Is Unavailable: Alternates, Last Buys, and Counterfeits You receive an allocation notice. A 32-week lead time. An End-of-Life announcement with a last-time buy window closing in 90 days. What you do in the next few hours determines whether your product ships on schedule, whether your BOM is going to cost significantly more, and whether your design needs to change. This guide covers how to qualify an alternate part in a way that holds up in production, how to ration available stock when you cannot get enough, how to make the last time buy versus redesign call with the right inputs, and how to assess counterfeit risk when allocation pressure pushes you toward non-standard sources. None of these decisions are as simple as the standard guidance suggests. This guide covers the hard cases. WHAT THIS GUIDE COVERS 1. Qualifying an alternate component: form-fit-function gaps, the requalification decision, and what to do when no alternate exists 2. Partial availability and rationing: how to allocate constrained stock across competing programs 3. The last time buy decision: how to calculate the right quantity, what it actually costs to hold inventory, and when redesign is cheaper 4. Counterfeit risk: which component categories are most targeted, what non-destructive testing can and cannot detect, and how to evaluate a non-authorized source when allocation forces the issue

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