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Texas Instruments UC3710DWTR

UC3710DWTR MOSFET Driver, Active, ROHS3, Buffer/Inverter

MPNUC3710DWTR
End of Life

Texas Instruments UC3710DWTR, buffer/inverter MOSFET driver, active lifecycle, ROHS3 compliant, Bulk package.

$4.46Ref. price · indicative, final on quote
StockContact for availability
MOQ1 pcs
  • 100% new & originalTraceable channels only — no refurbs, no pulls, no remarked parts.
  • Date & lot codes on quoteStated per line before you commit; label photos on request.
  • MSL-compliant ESD packingMoisture-sealed bags with indicator cards; reels photo-verified.
  • PayPal buyer protectionPay by T/T, PayPal or Payoneer — card payments covered end to end.

Specifications

UC3710DWTR Technical Specifications
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Product details

What the UC3710DWTR is and where it fits

The Texas Instruments UC3710DWTR is a buffer/inverter MOSFET driver designed to drive the gate of a single N-channel power MOSFET. It accepts a logic-level input and delivers the current needed to charge and discharge the gate capacitance quickly, minimizing switching losses in the power stage. This class of driver is common in switch-mode power supplies, DC-DC converters, motor drives, and any application where a microcontroller or PWM controller needs to drive a large MOSFET gate without loading the logic output.

Lifecycle and compliance — no obsolescence concern

The UC3710DWTR carries an Active product status and is ROHS3 compliant. No NRND or last-time-buy notice exists for this part.

Frequently asked questions

What is the equivalent of UC3710DWTR?

The LM5106MM/NOPB is a functional peer — it is also a MOSFET driver for N-channel MOSFETs, but it is a half-bridge driver with two outputs and synchronous drive capability, whereas the UC3710DWTR is a single-channel buffer/inverter driver. The choice depends on whether your topology needs a high-side/low-side pair or a single ground-referenced gate drive.

UC3710DWTR vs UC3710D: what's the difference?

The UC3710D and UC3710DWTR share the same buffer/inverter MOSFET driver function. The suffix difference typically indicates packaging or tape-and-reel variant — the DWTR is supplied in tape and reel, while the D suffix may be tube or different reel quantity. Electrical characteristics are identical.