Graeme Russ wrote:
I've taken some hi-res photos using a DLSR with a macro lens.
Where can I see them? Can upload at http://ge.tt/ or another favorite image hoster.
//Peter
Hi Peter,
On Wed, Oct 17, 2012 at 10:57 AM, Peter Stuge peter@stuge.se wrote:
Graeme Russ wrote:
I've taken some hi-res photos using a DLSR with a macro lens.
Where can I see them? Can upload at http://ge.tt/ or another favorite image hoster.
I'll hopefully upload them tonight (10 hours or so)
Regards,
Graeme
Hi Peter,
On 10/17/2012 10:57 AM, Peter Stuge wrote:
Graeme Russ wrote:
I've taken some hi-res photos using a DLSR with a macro lens.
Where can I see them? Can upload at http://ge.tt/ or another favorite image hoster.
I have some really good photos now. I just need to downsize them.
I found the BIOS chip:
MXIO MX 25L1606E M2I-126 3J761000 Z120272
16Mb (8MB), 200mil 8-SOP, -40°C to 85°C, 86MHz, Pb-Free
South Bridge: AMD FCH 1213 MADE IN TAIWAN PGC087.00 218-0792008
APU: AMD ED350DGCB22GT EA 1121CCM 9L72017E10499 (C) 2010 AMD MADE IN TAIWAN
Graeme Russ wrote:
I found the BIOS chip:
MXIO MX 25L1606E M2I-126 3J761000 Z120272
16Mb (8MB), 200mil 8-SOP, -40°C to 85°C, 86MHz, Pb-Free
MXIC yep. Solder something to it so that you can reprogram. Use the VCC on the chip for programming. Hold the mainboard in reset while you drive the SPI signals. I would check first that the chipset doesn't sink too much current. (Ampmeter+2k2 resistor between VCC and one signal at a time. The current should stay well under 1.5mA.)
//Peter
Hi Peter,
On Thu, Oct 18, 2012 at 9:33 AM, Peter Stuge peter@stuge.se wrote:
Graeme Russ wrote:
I found the BIOS chip:
MXIO MX 25L1606E M2I-126 3J761000 Z120272
16Mb (8MB), 200mil 8-SOP, -40°C to 85°C, 86MHz, Pb-Free
MXIC yep. Solder something to it so that you can reprogram. Use the
I was thinking of buying an 8 pin SOIP test clip
VCC on the chip for programming. Hold the mainboard in reset while you drive the SPI signals. I would check first that the chipset doesn't sink too much current. (Ampmeter+2k2 resistor between VCC and one signal at a time. The current should stay well under 1.5mA.)
I have an in-circuit programmer I used on another board (which had a breakout header for the SPI flash). Do you think I could just use this with the board powered-down?
Regards,
Graeme