You say 70ns ROM for Big Bang, I assume ,after seeing your video that, this is a custom chip?
its just a at28hc64b-70su eeprom but SOIC on a SOIC to DIP adapter board.
a regular DIP eeprom of the same speed should work..
slower chips should work but because all that stupid resistors bridges that Sinclair used to allow overriding data and address lines make a right bloody mess of the signal integrity. teh uber ( 20 Mhz ) zeddy splits the data and address busses up so no overriding signals
Andy
what's that Smell.... smells like fresh flux and solder fumes...
Thanks for that Andy but as I only have the Spectrum EPROM burner for the old 21/25v stuff then programming an EEPROM is a bit of an obstacle for a dunce such as myself sadly.
As for the 20mhz jobby then yes I can confirm that it's a bit of a super beast!
I am not Shure how the memotech devices work.
Was it the centronics or the hrg module that replaces part of the ROM with the internal 1k RAM?
And how does it do it?
Apart from that I only know of simple disable ROM
In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice. But, in practice, there is.
Standby alert
There are four lights!
Step up to red alert. Sir, are you absolutely sure? It does mean changing the bulb
Autumn is here. Bye bye summer 2024...
if I take the romcs at the edge connector ( with a pull down resistor) to one input of an OR gate and the other input from the ula generated ROMCS and the output directly to the internal ROM.
that will work right?
what's that Smell.... smells like fresh flux and solder fumes...
You mean either side of R28…
One side is connected to the ULA.
The other side is connected to the edge-connector and (on a standard machine) to the ROM.
But I presume on a modified machine, the output of the OR gate will drive the ROM instead.
Because the OR gate has one input directly connected to the ‘ULA’, the thinking is that it will switch fast enough?
Why do you think you need a pull-down resistor? A high value would not make much difference as if I understand you correctly, it’s still getting a signal via R28 (680Ω), admittedly very slightly delayed due to stray capacitance. But a low value would draw rather a lot of current.
Standby alert
There are four lights!
Step up to red alert. Sir, are you absolutely sure? It does mean changing the bulb
Autumn is here. Bye bye summer 2024...