2013-02-05 08:39 AM
Hi all,
I'm looking for buying an 500 x STM32F050K4U6 for production. I noticed that some parts have a ''A'' at the end of the part number ( STM32F050K4U6A ), so I looked at the datasheet, on the ''part numbering section'', and it is written : A = non-optimized die Blank = standard die What's the difference ? Does this mean the ''A'' version is like ''prototypes'' ? Thanks for help. Best regards, Vincent.2013-02-06 09:16 AM
While it's up to ST to give a definitive answer, I'd say, yes, they are preliminary versions of the chip.
JW2013-02-08 02:08 PM
Thanks for your answer Waclawek.
The thing I ''don't understand'', is that A version is more expensive than non-A version. Is it possible to get an answer from ST please ?2013-05-05 09:45 AM
Hello,
Let me share a little marketing secret. ;)When new products are introduced, we are generating a set of part numbers combining various pin counts, peripherals memory size. In our case, the reference STM32F050 in 16k or 32KB version was supported by a bigger device. in order to trace the introduction of an optimized die we have modifying t he sales type.The suffix ''A'' was created for that purpose.Nowadays, the ''Non-A'' version is the optimized device. Consequently the ''A'' version is terminated.Transferring an application from ''A'' to the latest ''Non A'' should cause no problem. Best Regards