I second this (the elnec) - I have the Dataman-48PRO+ which is basically the same thing under a different name. http://www.dataman.com/WebPages/ProductView.aspx?pid=627 I've sent them quite a few devices to add including the 82S114/5, PLS153, several different variations of static rams simply for testing, and others. The support team is great to work with. I have to throw in a big BUT though. You need an expensive adapter to do 2708's and TMS2716's and you need an expensive power supply upgrade for *some* bipolar proms - I haven't had to do that yet. It's great for going through a pile of TTL and static ram pulls and weeding out the flakey ones. The programmer can fit nicely in your desk drawer too. :) The best bang for your buck would still have to be the Data I/O 29B with the unipak if you just want to burn your typical video game roms and bipolar proms. Matt On 6/2/2010 9:25 AM, Tim Matthews wrote:
I'd be looking at the top-end of the Elnec range - http://www.elnec.com/. The nicer models seem to be FPGA driven so very upgradeable, the software is nice and very well supported too. I've got a Smartprog2 which is nice but misses out the TTL/RAM testing features (with a device ID check locking out the features in software, so it's possible to hack around it[1]). You'd have to spend a bit of time on the supported device list but the hardware design is such that pretty much anything can be supported.
If you supply them with a couple of blanks and a datasheet they will also add progger support. I believe this may exist only whilst your device is under warranty though.
cheers tim
[1] My first elnec was bought via ebay and was a top-end model that did everything including RAM/TTL/Test vectors. After a couple of months the latest progger software was installed and wiped the FPGA. It turned out the device was a chinese bootleg and elnec disabled it. I eventually obtained a refund from the ebay seller and bought a BK Precision 844USB which is a rebadged elnec, but a slightly less capable model than the bootleg I'd initially bought. Elnec wanted me to spend about £600 to replace my boot with an official version which I thought was too much given my limited requirements, so I went for a model a couple of steps down. And even though this is considered a "lite" version, it's rock solid and has never refused to blow any EPROM)
On 2 June 2010 16:59, Kevin Moore<talon.k@gmail.com> wrote:
If money were no object, and you needed something that would program just about darn near everything. Pals, Gals, PLD's, Old TI eproms, newer eproms.
What would you get?
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