FAQ - Frequently Asked Questions - How to design embedded products for long-term availability
Intro
Embedded products often remain in production for many years. Component selection should therefore include lifecycle, availability, second-source options, software support and redesign risk.
A technically good component can still create problems if it becomes unavailable too early.
Key technical selection criteria
Evaluate:
- lifecycle status
- manufacturer roadmap
- long-term availability
- second-source options
- package availability
- lead time
- minimum order quantity
- software support
- pin compatibility
- certification impact
- replacement strategy
Component lifecycle
Check whether components are:
- active
- not recommended for new designs
- end-of-life
- last-time-buy
- custom or standard
- supported by multiple suppliers
Supply chain risk
Review:
- single-source components
- critical modules
- connectors
- displays
- memory
- power components
- wireless modules
- processors
Software and certification impact
Changing a component may affect:
- firmware
- drivers
- certification
- mechanical design
- RF performance
- test procedures
- documentation
Common mistakes
- using consumer-grade components in long-life products
- not checking lifecycle status
- relying on one critical supplier
- selecting modules without roadmap visibility
- ignoring firmware dependencies
- no replacement strategy
- no second-source review
Decision checklist
Before final component selection, check:
- expected product lifetime
- component lifecycle
- second-source options
- software dependencies
- certification impact
- lead times
- supplier roadmap
- replacement risk
- stock strategy
Need support selecting components for long-term availability? TOP-electronics can help combine technical and supply chain considerations.
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