Also discusses high temps, and any things that should NOT be stored in garages that reach temperature extremes. Details what might happen.

TLDR quotes:

At temperatures lower than 41 degrees Fahrenheit, it is likely the electronics will become unstable and display erratic behavior.

Most electronics are designed to continue operating at temperatures up to 120 degrees Fahrenheit (50 degrees Celsius). At temperatures higher than 120 degrees Fahrenheit, the electronic can reach its thermal limit, causing components to fail and degrade.

  • @A_A
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    1 year ago

    if I recall correctly, for TTL :
    military down to -70⁰C,
    civil down to -50⁰C

    • @kalkulatOP
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      21 year ago

      Sounds about right … -some- of the older ICs are pretty rugged. OTOH, things I wonder about on the below-freezing side (colder things shrink) … include ROMs? Larger capacitors? Modern high-density RAM? FPGA? And then there’s water condensation (rust?) water freezing? (might even damage traces on PC boards)… (Wonder if there’s an archive of chip datesheets online?)

      • @A_A
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        41 year ago

        All specification for every components should be published (and available online) from every good manufacturers.