The TC51 is a very low power, open drain output, CMOS voltage detector with built-in delay
The TC32M is a fully-integrated processor supervisor in a 3-pin package
The TC1272A are cost-effective system supervisor circuits designed to monitor VDD in digital systems and provide a reset signal to the host processor, when necessary
The TC1270A, TC1271A and TC1270AN are cost-effective system supervisor circuits designed to monitor VCC in digital systems and provide a reset signal to the host processor when necessary
The TC1270A, TC1271A and TC1270AN are cost-effective system supervisor circuits designed to monitor VCC in digital systems and provide a reset signal to the host processor when necessary
The TC1270A, TC1271A and TC1270AN are cost-effective system supervisor circuits designed to monitor VCC in digital systems and provide a reset signal to the host processor when necessary
TC1232 is a fully-integrated processor supervisor
The MIC826 is a low-current, ultra-small, voltage supervisor with manual reset input, watchdog timer, and active-high and active-low push-pull outputs
The MIC811 and MIC812 are inexpensive microprocessor supervisory circuits that monitor power supplies in microprocessor based systems
The MIC8115 is an inexpensive microprocessor supervisory circuit that monitors power supplies in microprocessor based systems
The MIC8114 is an inexpensive microprocessor supervisory circuit that monitors the power supply in microprocessor based systems
The MIC811 and MIC812 are inexpensive microprocessor supervisory circuits that monitor power supplies in microprocessor based systems
The MIC809 and MIC810 are inexpensive microprocessor supervisory circuits that monitor power supplies in microprocessor based systems
The MIC809 and MIC810 are inexpensive microprocessor supervisory circuits that monitor power supplies in microprocessor based systems
The MIC803 is a single-voltage supervisor with open-drain reset output that provides accurate power supply monitoring and reset generation in microprocessor based systems
The MIC705, MIC706, MIC707, and MIC708 areinexpensive microprocessor supervisory circuits that monitor power supplies in microprocessor-based systems