G'day Clay,
Thanks for checking out the details! I'm too inexperienced with using
this hardware to know if I can use 29A parts? Based on the complexity
of the design, I'd guess not.
Maybe David Fish could tell us, but otherwise I'll have to pass...
Steven S Ozdemir
sso@dsc.com
ps - For $100, sure seems like it would be a nice stand alone EPROM
burner. I've found that I need one occasionally when I'm far away from
home, say in a warehouse! And the gang pack module might be convenient
at home, eh?
>----------
>From: Clay Cowgill[SMTP:clay@supra.com]
>Sent: Wednesday, June 18, 1997 3:04 PM
>To: vectorlist@goonsquad.spies.com
>Subject: RE: Data I/O model 29?
>
>Hey Steve,
>
>That Data I/O turned out to be a model 29A. In don't know what the
>difference is...
>
>There were four separate modules. I wrote down the only numbers I could
>find:
>
>715-1033-4 "Programming Pack" takes a 24pin .6" wide chip
>950-0077-006 "Gang Pack" takes 8 28 pin DIPs
>715-1035-2 "Programming Pack" takes a 16pin dip
>
>Are any of these anything you'd want? I talked them down to about $15 per
>module. (They were at $25-20.) I didn't buy any of it yet (the 29A is
>$60), but if you'd like any of it, let me know and I'll pick 'em up for
>you.
>
>There was a manual for the Gang Pack and it had a receipt for the
>"universal 2B" module, but I didn't see anything named that on the cart...
>
>-Clay
>
>Clayton N. Cowgill Engineering Manager
>_______________________________________________________________________
>/\ Diamond Multimedia Systems, Inc. clay@supra.com
>\/ Communications Division http://www.supra.com/
>
>
>
Received on Wed Jun 18 12:35:07 1997
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