FPGA, SoC, And CPLD Boards And Kits
FPGA Evaluation and Development Kits

EP1K50QI208-2N

speranskyanton
1.997 Vistas

Hello!
Could you please advise whether the marking structure on the EP1K50QI208-2N components — which have been discontinued for a long time — matches the one shown in the attached photo, particularly the format of the date code (week of manufacture)?
I would be extremely grateful for a prompt response, and I would also appreciate it if you could share any available documentation on the marking system for the ACEX 1K series.

Thank you very much in advance!

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11 Respuestas
sstrell
Colaborador Distinguido III
1.932 Vistas

No attached photo.

speranskyanton
1.726 Vistas

Hello!
Apologies — I’m attaching the photos now.
Photo marking shows the marking of a chip from a different series, but in all available documentation, the week of production is indicated using specific symbols.
Is it possible that on older components the production week could be marked simply as, for example, “20”?
Thank you!

FvM
Colaborador Distinguido II
1.701 Vistas

Hi,

not sure what you want to achieve, but I can confirm that ACEX 1K series used similar marking with YYWW date code, e.g. below 0125.


2025-07-31 11.59.58-1.jpg

speranskyanton
1.690 Vistas

Hello!
Thank you!
Here is an example: a photo of a component with the date code “1721”.
In the current marking format, “21” does not appear to be a valid week code.
Was it common in older marking formats for the production week to be represented by any symbols, such as “21”?

FvM
Colaborador Distinguido II
1.619 Vistas
Hi
"In the current marking format, “21” does not appear to be a valid week code." What else?
speranskyanton
1.347 Vistas

Hello!
That’s exactly why I am asking you — the components were discontinued in 2017, while all the current documents about component marking are from around 2019–2020. Could it be that in earlier years the week code format was different?
Thank you!

FvM
Colaborador Distinguido II
1.306 Vistas

Hi,

as far as I see, the date code format didn't change between 2001 and today. 1721 should be 2017 week 21. Any indications that it doesn't fit?  

speranskyanton
1.293 Vistas

Hello!
Thank you!
So, in earlier markings, could any production week number be present, rather than only specific codes?

Fakhrul
Empleados
847 Vistas

Hi speranskyanton,


Yes, as FVM mentioned:

The date code on the top marking of the Altera EP1K50 chip follows the standard YYWW format:

  • The first two digits represent the year of manufacture (17 = 2017).
  • The last two digits represent the work week within that year (21 = week 21).

So, a date code of 1721 means the device was manufactured in week 21 of 2017.


I tried to find official documentation specific to FLEX 10K devices, but could not locate a direct reference. The closest available documentation is the Product Marking Information for MAX® II, MAX® V Devices (https://cdrdv2-public.intel.com/732570/product-marking-information-max-ii-and-max-v.pdf), which uses the same YYWW format for date codes. Altera has generally applied this format consistently across their product families.


Regards,

Fakhrul




Fakhrul
Empleados
608 Vistas

As we haven't received a response to our previous notification, this thread will be transitioned to community support. We hope all your concerns have been addressed. If you have any new questions, please feel free to open a new thread to receive support from Intel experts. Otherwise, community users will continue to assist you here. Thank you.


speranskyanton
184 Vistas

Hello!
Returning to this question — is it possible that the lot code in the marking is positioned so close to the main marking (closer to the center)?
Please reply as soon as possible.
Thank you!

speranskyanton_0-1757064222822.png

 

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