The Toshiba transistors were in production for decades. This product lifespan is a lot longer than many semiconductor products. It was normal in the 1980s for a transistor to get discontinued after only a few years. A new improved part would take its place. The result of a long production life is that their 'cookie cutter' became incredibly well developed. Product quality is fundamentally related to production quantity. The more you make of something, the better you get at it. After the first ten years, Toshiba had an incredibly-high quality level built into the 2SC2879. Made that transistor famous for withstanding double the stresses it was rated for. Of course it's not that different from putting twin turbos on your 4-cylinder daily driver. It will take the stresses, but will wear out sooner than if you left it stock. The Kenwood TS-50 ham HF transceiver used a pair of these in its final stage. The radio was rated for 100 Watts PEP. The final transistors should outlive every other part in the radio at that level.
But nothing lasts forever. European product-safety rules in the early 00s banned a list of toxic substances. The 2SC2879 contained both lead and beryllia ceramic. Both of the were banned beyond 2006 or 2007. Word was that Merrit at RF Parts Inc. sweet-talked Toshiba into redesigning the part with non-toxic substitutes. You can tell this at a glance by looking at the very bottom layer of insulation that rests against the mounting foot. If it's white, it's beryllia the toxic banned substance. If it's gray, that's aluminum nitride, the toxin-free substitute. A red dot next to the printed type number also indicates this version. Nothing lasts forever, and the red-dot version was eventually discontinued. Knock-off parts appeared to fill the vacuum after that. The DEI copy was particularly fragile. Counterfeits abounded, most of them had a short KBK rating, as in Keys Between Kabooms. Hua Gao semiconductor is a legit chinese enterprise. Their "HG" parts are not so robust as the Toshiba transistors became, but they provide legitimate performance if you treat them with respect. But any commodity in short supply is subject to counterfeiting. The HG parts are no exception. The one safe source of the legit part I know is ICA manufacturing, aka "Fat Boy". With any luck they'll be around for a while longer.
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