The IRF520 has three things going for it.
First, it's an old design that any manufacturer in that business can make with the factory they already have. No need to buy fancy new (expensive) equipment to make these. Pretty sure they no longer have to pay royalties to International Rectifier, who invented the part in the first place.
Second, anything made by multiple competitors will always be cheaper than a part made by only one.
Third, it's made in monster quantities to use in anything from a LED yard light, compact fluorescent bulb, or engine control unit.
The bigger the manufacturing quantity the lower the unit cost.
This all adds up to a component that's stupidly cheap, even when you buy it from a reputable source. Naturally the fly-by-night sources are cheaper yet.
Just one little problem. Well maybe a couple.
It can't stand SWR, and tends to fail if it's gets much over two to one. No SWR in a LED yard light. Just wasn't built with that in mind.
It's not efficient. The IRF520 and siblings waste as much as twice the power supply's power as a RF amplifier transistor. If you sell a part for RF, efficiency is an important feature to provide. This is why they tend to run hot, along with the modulator transistor that feeds power to them.
And there's the problem. If you design a MOSFET to be a RF amplifier, it's built differently on the inside. Makes it cost a LOT more to make and sell.
When a factory can choose between a IRF that costs a quarter, and a Mitsubishi "RD-HHF" part that costs four bucks, which way do you think they'll go?
The manufacturer's attitude will be "It blows up too soon? Well, come back and buy another one".
And if you think a radio that doesn't commit suicide so soon would compete with the cheaper radios, you're free to start your own factory and brand. You'll find out.
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