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by 11thEarlOfMar
1247 days ago
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It's not a matter of intricacy. It's a 'low tech' power chip that is made on fully depreciated and outdated equipment. Most likely all Infineon lines were running at capacity at that time and they had no place to put it. Setting up a new line would not make business sense since a new equipment would cost in the realm of $250 Million for a line, and take a year or more to set up. Not to mention, lead times for new equipment was also extending. By that point, the crunch may as well have ended and they'd then have more capacity for that device than they needed, and no ROI on their $250M. |
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Here's where this could get ironic: what if they wouldn't be able to set up that line anyway, since the equipment they'd need itself requires the very chip they just stopped producing?
I wonder if such circular dependencies are already a consideration in the semiconductor business.