Okay, so today I wanted to mess around with MOSFETs, specifically figuring out the drain, source, and gate pins. I’ve played with these little guys before, but sometimes I still get mixed up, so I figured a hands-on refresher would be good. I grabbed a few MOSFETs from my parts bin – I think they were N-channel, but honestly, I wasn’t 100% sure at first.

Getting Started: The Datasheet (Ugh)
First things first, I really should have looked up the datasheet. I know, I know, boring! But it’s the right way to do it. Usually, the datasheet will have a nice little diagram showing which pin is which. I kinda skipped this step initially and went straight to experimenting. (Don’t tell anyone!)
The Multimeter Method
So, my trusty multimeter came to the rescue. I set it to the diode test mode. You know, the one that makes that little beeping sound? That’s the one.
- First Test: I put the red probe on one pin and the black probe on another. If I got a reading (and sometimes a beep), I knew I might have found the gate and source, or maybe the gate and drain. The thing is, you can’t be sure yet.
- Switching it Up: Then I swapped the probes. Red where black was, and black where red was. If I still got a reading, then those two pins were likely NOT the gate. The gate is kinda special – it’s isolated.
- Finding a strong beep and weak beep :Usually one pair have stronger beep and one have a really week beep, or sometimes a very little beep. Then this maybe Drain and Source.
- The Process of Elimination: I kept doing this – testing, swapping, testing, swapping – until I found one pin that didn’t give me a consistent reading no matter which way I connected the probes. That, my friends, is a good candidate for the gate.
Testing My Theory
Once I thought I had the gate figured out, I needed to confirm. I used a small voltage source (just a couple of batteries) to try and turn the MOSFET “on”.
Here’s how I did it:
- I connected the positive side of my battery pack to what I believed was the drain.
- I connected the negative side of the battery pack to what I believed was the source.
- Then, I briefly touched a wire from the positive side of the battery to the suspected gate pin. This is like giving the gate a little “kick” to turn it on.
- If I was right, and I had the drain and source correct, the MOSFET should have switched “on,” and I could measure a voltage drop across the drain and source (it should be pretty low).
- If nothing happened, I probably had the drain and source swapped. So, I swapped them and tried again.
Success! (Eventually)
After a bit of trial and error (and yes, I did swap the drain and source a couple of times!), I was able to get the MOSFET to switch on and off reliably. That meant I had correctly identified the drain, source, and gate!

It’s a bit of a fiddly process, but it’s a good way to learn how these things work. Next time, though, I promise to check the datasheet first! It’ll probably save me some time and frustration. But hey, where’s the fun in doing everything the perfect way, right?