Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems.

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Default EPROMs nearing end of life?

The EPROMs in one of my machines are at least 32 years old. Reading
online about EPROMs it seems that maybe my old devices are nearing the
end of the life of the memory contents. So I'm thinking I should copy
or have copied the data in these old devices. Am I right?
Thanks,
Eric
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Default EPROMs nearing end of life?


wrote in message
...
The EPROMs in one of my machines are at least 32 years old. Reading
online about EPROMs it seems that maybe my old devices are nearing the
end of the life of the memory contents. So I'm thinking I should copy
or have copied the data in these old devices. Am I right?
Thanks,
Eric


Definitely make a copy. Then program a second copy of the EPROMS and swap
them in to confirm the copy. If the copies are good, erase and reprogram the
originals and keep as a spare.

Also replace any memory backup batteries while you are there.

You will probably be dead before you need the copies.


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Default EPROMs nearing end of life?

On 2017/04/03 9:59 AM, tom wrote:
wrote in message
...
The EPROMs in one of my machines are at least 32 years old. Reading
online about EPROMs it seems that maybe my old devices are nearing the
end of the life of the memory contents. So I'm thinking I should copy
or have copied the data in these old devices. Am I right?
Thanks,
Eric


Definitely make a copy. Then program a second copy of the EPROMS and swap
them in to confirm the copy. If the copies are good, erase and reprogram the
originals and keep as a spare.

Also replace any memory backup batteries while you are there.

You will probably be dead before you need the copies.



EPROMs are quite stable in my experience, however backing up and using
the second set of EPROMs to run the product seems reasonable if a bit of
overkill. Make a copy, archive it off-site and keep your burner in a
safe place. I would simply use the originals until they gave me cause
for doubt.

Also - do not erase the originals, simply reprogram (refresh) them after
telling the programmer that the chips are not blank. EPROMs have a
limited number of erase/burn cycles so why knock one cycle off? I do
find that a number of originally good EPROMs (that had valid data) fail
to reprogram after being erased.

I burn many classic EPROMs (2716s and up) and PROMs a month, so have
some experience in this matter.

John :-#)#

--
(Please post followups or tech inquiries to the USENET newsgroup)
John's Jukes Ltd. 2343 Main St., Vancouver, BC, Canada V5T 3C9
(604)872-5757 or Fax 872-2010 (Pinballs, Jukes, Video Games)
www.flippers.com
"Old pinballers never die, they just flip out."
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Default EPROMs nearing end of life?


"John Robertson" wrote in message
...
On 2017/04/03 9:59 AM, tom wrote:
wrote in message
...
The EPROMs in one of my machines are at least 32 years old. Reading
online about EPROMs it seems that maybe my old devices are nearing the
end of the life of the memory contents. So I'm thinking I should copy
or have copied the data in these old devices. Am I right?
Thanks,
Eric


Definitely make a copy. Then program a second copy of the EPROMS and swap
them in to confirm the copy. If the copies are good, erase and reprogram
the
originals and keep as a spare.

Also replace any memory backup batteries while you are there.

You will probably be dead before you need the copies.



EPROMs are quite stable in my experience, however backing up and using the
second set of EPROMs to run the product seems reasonable if a bit of
overkill. Make a copy, archive it off-site and keep your burner in a safe
place. I would simply use the originals until they gave me cause for
doubt.

Also - do not erase the originals, simply reprogram (refresh) them after
telling the programmer that the chips are not blank. EPROMs have a limited
number of erase/burn cycles so why knock one cycle off? I do find that a
number of originally good EPROMs (that had valid data) fail to reprogram
after being erased.

I burn many classic EPROMs (2716s and up) and PROMs a month, so have some
experience in this matter.

John :-#)#

--


I would agree with you on that except there are some programmers that will
not permit you to program an EPROM that is not erased and does not have the
option.

So I was just keeping it generic. Also burning a second copy allows you to
confirm a good copy from the originals. Plus most of them are cheap.





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Default EPROMs nearing end of life?

On 4/3/2017 10:21 AM, John Robertson wrote:
On 2017/04/03 9:59 AM, tom wrote:
wrote in message
...
The EPROMs in one of my machines are at least 32 years old. Reading
online about EPROMs it seems that maybe my old devices are nearing the
end of the life of the memory contents. So I'm thinking I should copy
or have copied the data in these old devices. Am I right?
Thanks,
Eric


Definitely make a copy. Then program a second copy of the EPROMS and swap
them in to confirm the copy. If the copies are good, erase and
reprogram the
originals and keep as a spare.

Also replace any memory backup batteries while you are there.

You will probably be dead before you need the copies.



EPROMs are quite stable in my experience, however backing up and using
the second set of EPROMs to run the product seems reasonable if a bit of
overkill. Make a copy, archive it off-site and keep your burner in a
safe place. I would simply use the originals until they gave me cause
for doubt.

Also - do not erase the originals, simply reprogram (refresh) them after
telling the programmer that the chips are not blank.


I'd like to hear the theory behind that.
Are you saying that a failed bit is never zero?
Is programming a zero to zero the equivalent of twice the
program pulse width? Is that less stressful than an erase?

EPROMs have a
limited number of erase/burn cycles so why knock one cycle off? I do
find that a number of originally good EPROMs (that had valid data) fail
to reprogram after being erased.


If it's that close to failure, wouldn't you want to learn that now?

I burn many classic EPROMs (2716s and up) and PROMs a month, so have
some experience in this matter.

John :-#)#

I understand the desire to do whatever you can to keep old equipment
working,
but this is getting mighty close to, "if it ain't broke, don't fix it."


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Default EPROMs nearing end of life?

On 2017/04/03 11:20 AM, mike wrote:
On 4/3/2017 10:21 AM, John Robertson wrote:
On 2017/04/03 9:59 AM, tom wrote:
wrote in message
...
The EPROMs in one of my machines are at least 32 years old. Reading
online about EPROMs it seems that maybe my old devices are nearing the
end of the life of the memory contents. So I'm thinking I should copy
or have copied the data in these old devices. Am I right?
Thanks,
Eric

Definitely make a copy. Then program a second copy of the EPROMS and
swap
them in to confirm the copy. If the copies are good, erase and
reprogram the
originals and keep as a spare.

Also replace any memory backup batteries while you are there.

You will probably be dead before you need the copies.



EPROMs are quite stable in my experience, however backing up and using
the second set of EPROMs to run the product seems reasonable if a bit of
overkill. Make a copy, archive it off-site and keep your burner in a
safe place. I would simply use the originals until they gave me cause
for doubt.

Also - do not erase the originals, simply reprogram (refresh) them after
telling the programmer that the chips are not blank.


I'd like to hear the theory behind that.
Are you saying that a failed bit is never zero?
Is programming a zero to zero the equivalent of twice the
program pulse width? Is that less stressful than an erase?

EPROMs have a
limited number of erase/burn cycles so why knock one cycle off? I do
find that a number of originally good EPROMs (that had valid data) fail
to reprogram after being erased.


If it's that close to failure, wouldn't you want to learn that now?


No, if the thing is working why bother? Erasing and reprogramming
doesn't prove anything and your burner may not do as good a job as the
factory's rather expensive EPROM burner - which was likely a DATA 1/O 29
series with Gang Pack or possibly the DATA I/O Gang Programmer model 120
(early 80s).

http://www.dataio.com/Company/About-...iversary/1980s

In other words the erase and reprogram could result in a less reliable
part than it was originally. I don't bother to refresh EPROMs, nor do I
replace them until they fail. Seems pointless to me to do anything
beyond double archiving the data.


I burn many classic EPROMs (2716s and up) and PROMs a month, so have
some experience in this matter.

John :-#)#

I understand the desire to do whatever you can to keep old equipment
working,
but this is getting mighty close to, "if it ain't broke, don't fix it."


There is a awful lot to be said for "if it ain't broke, don't fix it.".
I see many game boards and arcade games where the owner thought it was a
good idea to replace things that were still working. This sometimes
results in an unrepairable (too many mistakes = too many hours to
repair) game as they have made too many mistakes.

John :-#)#

--
(Please post followups or tech inquiries to the USENET newsgroup)
John's Jukes Ltd. 2343 Main St., Vancouver, BC, Canada V5T 3C9
(604)872-5757 or Fax 872-2010 (Pinballs, Jukes, Video Games)
www.flippers.com
"Old pinballers never die, they just flip out."
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Default EPROMs nearing end of life?

On Mon, 3 Apr 2017 12:35:41 -0700, John Robertson
wrote:

On 2017/04/03 11:20 AM, mike wrote:
On 4/3/2017 10:21 AM, John Robertson wrote:
On 2017/04/03 9:59 AM, tom wrote:
wrote in message
...
The EPROMs in one of my machines are at least 32 years old. Reading
online about EPROMs it seems that maybe my old devices are nearing the
end of the life of the memory contents. So I'm thinking I should copy
or have copied the data in these old devices. Am I right?
Thanks,
Eric

Definitely make a copy. Then program a second copy of the EPROMS and
swap
them in to confirm the copy. If the copies are good, erase and
reprogram the
originals and keep as a spare.

Also replace any memory backup batteries while you are there.

You will probably be dead before you need the copies.



EPROMs are quite stable in my experience, however backing up and using
the second set of EPROMs to run the product seems reasonable if a bit of
overkill. Make a copy, archive it off-site and keep your burner in a
safe place. I would simply use the originals until they gave me cause
for doubt.

Also - do not erase the originals, simply reprogram (refresh) them after
telling the programmer that the chips are not blank.


I'd like to hear the theory behind that.
Are you saying that a failed bit is never zero?
Is programming a zero to zero the equivalent of twice the
program pulse width? Is that less stressful than an erase?

EPROMs have a
limited number of erase/burn cycles so why knock one cycle off? I do
find that a number of originally good EPROMs (that had valid data) fail
to reprogram after being erased.


If it's that close to failure, wouldn't you want to learn that now?


No, if the thing is working why bother? Erasing and reprogramming
doesn't prove anything and your burner may not do as good a job as the
factory's rather expensive EPROM burner - which was likely a DATA 1/O 29
series with Gang Pack or possibly the DATA I/O Gang Programmer model 120
(early 80s).

http://www.dataio.com/Company/About-...iversary/1980s

In other words the erase and reprogram could result in a less reliable
part than it was originally. I don't bother to refresh EPROMs, nor do I
replace them until they fail. Seems pointless to me to do anything
beyond double archiving the data.


I burn many classic EPROMs (2716s and up) and PROMs a month, so have
some experience in this matter.

John :-#)#

I understand the desire to do whatever you can to keep old equipment
working,
but this is getting mighty close to, "if it ain't broke, don't fix it."


There is a awful lot to be said for "if it ain't broke, don't fix it.".
I see many game boards and arcade games where the owner thought it was a
good idea to replace things that were still working. This sometimes
results in an unrepairable (too many mistakes = too many hours to
repair) game as they have made too many mistakes.

John :-#)#

Greetings John,
I just went through three weeks of frustration fixing this machine
tool. The control maker, FANUC, said the problem was most likely not
any part of the control. The lathe maker, Miyano, who married the
control with the lathe said the problem was not likely to be on the
machine side. The guy I spoke with at Miyano said that the lathes
hardly ever need major work because they are so well built. And he is
correct. The machine is a great machine. So good in fact that it would
be worth it to put a new control on the thing if the old control
failed. The problem turned out to be a circuit board that interfaces
with the lathe. I bought a used board and swapped the EPROMs and now
the machine is running again. FANUC says that the EPROMs on the board
are hard to find replacements for so I want to get copies made. Since
you copy many a month I was wondering if you do this service for
others or just yourself. It might be less risky to pay and expert than
to do the copying myself.
Eric
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Default EPROMs nearing end of life?

On 2017/04/03 3:18 PM, wrote:
On Mon, 3 Apr 2017 12:35:41 -0700, John Robertson
wrote:

On 2017/04/03 11:20 AM, mike wrote:
On 4/3/2017 10:21 AM, John Robertson wrote:
On 2017/04/03 9:59 AM, tom wrote:
wrote in message
...
The EPROMs in one of my machines are at least 32 years old. Reading
online about EPROMs it seems that maybe my old devices are nearing the
end of the life of the memory contents. So I'm thinking I should copy
or have copied the data in these old devices. Am I right?
Thanks,
Eric

Definitely make a copy. Then program a second copy of the EPROMS and
swap
them in to confirm the copy. If the copies are good, erase and
reprogram the
originals and keep as a spare.

Also replace any memory backup batteries while you are there.

You will probably be dead before you need the copies.



EPROMs are quite stable in my experience, however backing up and using
the second set of EPROMs to run the product seems reasonable if a bit of
overkill. Make a copy, archive it off-site and keep your burner in a
safe place. I would simply use the originals until they gave me cause
for doubt.

Also - do not erase the originals, simply reprogram (refresh) them after
telling the programmer that the chips are not blank.

I'd like to hear the theory behind that.
Are you saying that a failed bit is never zero?
Is programming a zero to zero the equivalent of twice the
program pulse width? Is that less stressful than an erase?

EPROMs have a
limited number of erase/burn cycles so why knock one cycle off? I do
find that a number of originally good EPROMs (that had valid data) fail
to reprogram after being erased.

If it's that close to failure, wouldn't you want to learn that now?


No, if the thing is working why bother? Erasing and reprogramming
doesn't prove anything and your burner may not do as good a job as the
factory's rather expensive EPROM burner - which was likely a DATA 1/O 29
series with Gang Pack or possibly the DATA I/O Gang Programmer model 120
(early 80s).

http://www.dataio.com/Company/About-...iversary/1980s

In other words the erase and reprogram could result in a less reliable
part than it was originally. I don't bother to refresh EPROMs, nor do I
replace them until they fail. Seems pointless to me to do anything
beyond double archiving the data.


I burn many classic EPROMs (2716s and up) and PROMs a month, so have
some experience in this matter.

John :-#)#

I understand the desire to do whatever you can to keep old equipment
working,
but this is getting mighty close to, "if it ain't broke, don't fix it."


There is a awful lot to be said for "if it ain't broke, don't fix it.".
I see many game boards and arcade games where the owner thought it was a
good idea to replace things that were still working. This sometimes
results in an unrepairable (too many mistakes = too many hours to
repair) game as they have made too many mistakes.

John :-#)#

Greetings John,
I just went through three weeks of frustration fixing this machine
tool. The control maker, FANUC, said the problem was most likely not
any part of the control. The lathe maker, Miyano, who married the
control with the lathe said the problem was not likely to be on the
machine side. The guy I spoke with at Miyano said that the lathes
hardly ever need major work because they are so well built. And he is
correct. The machine is a great machine. So good in fact that it would
be worth it to put a new control on the thing if the old control
failed. The problem turned out to be a circuit board that interfaces
with the lathe. I bought a used board and swapped the EPROMs and now
the machine is running again. FANUC says that the EPROMs on the board
are hard to find replacements for so I want to get copies made. Since
you copy many a month I was wondering if you do this service for
others or just yourself. It might be less risky to pay and expert than
to do the copying myself.
Eric


Hi Eric,

I do archive EPROMs ($15US each plus shipping) however there are a some
potential risks in shipping them to me.

1) My shop is in Canada - and Fedex/UPS/DHL all charge my shop customs
import fees that can reach $40US. We normally have Americans (I am
assuming you are in the USA) ship stuff to us by US Post as the import
fees (if that happens) is around $7US.

2) Stuff gets lost in transit. Rare, but can you afford to lose the EPROMs?

3) Handling. Do you have anti-static foam and an anti-static bag, or IC
anti-static tubes that you can ship these in?

What city are you in? I can ask on the Data I/O mail list to see if
anyone in your city can help you. Likely a small case of beer or bottle
of wine would suffice for that person...

John :-#)#

--
(Please post followups or tech inquiries to the USENET newsgroup)
John's Jukes Ltd. 2343 Main St., Vancouver, BC, Canada V5T 3C9
(604)872-5757 or Fax 872-2010 (Pinballs, Jukes, Video Games)
www.flippers.com
"Old pinballers never die, they just flip out."
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Posts: 2,163
Default EPROMs nearing end of life?

On Mon, 3 Apr 2017 16:48:00 -0700, John Robertson
wrote:

On 2017/04/03 3:18 PM, wrote:
On Mon, 3 Apr 2017 12:35:41 -0700, John Robertson
wrote:

On 2017/04/03 11:20 AM, mike wrote:
On 4/3/2017 10:21 AM, John Robertson wrote:
On 2017/04/03 9:59 AM, tom wrote:
wrote in message
...
The EPROMs in one of my machines are at least 32 years old. Reading
online about EPROMs it seems that maybe my old devices are nearing the
end of the life of the memory contents. So I'm thinking I should copy
or have copied the data in these old devices. Am I right?
Thanks,
Eric

Definitely make a copy. Then program a second copy of the EPROMS and
swap
them in to confirm the copy. If the copies are good, erase and
reprogram the
originals and keep as a spare.

Also replace any memory backup batteries while you are there.

You will probably be dead before you need the copies.



EPROMs are quite stable in my experience, however backing up and using
the second set of EPROMs to run the product seems reasonable if a bit of
overkill. Make a copy, archive it off-site and keep your burner in a
safe place. I would simply use the originals until they gave me cause
for doubt.

Also - do not erase the originals, simply reprogram (refresh) them after
telling the programmer that the chips are not blank.

I'd like to hear the theory behind that.
Are you saying that a failed bit is never zero?
Is programming a zero to zero the equivalent of twice the
program pulse width? Is that less stressful than an erase?

EPROMs have a
limited number of erase/burn cycles so why knock one cycle off? I do
find that a number of originally good EPROMs (that had valid data) fail
to reprogram after being erased.

If it's that close to failure, wouldn't you want to learn that now?

No, if the thing is working why bother? Erasing and reprogramming
doesn't prove anything and your burner may not do as good a job as the
factory's rather expensive EPROM burner - which was likely a DATA 1/O 29
series with Gang Pack or possibly the DATA I/O Gang Programmer model 120
(early 80s).

http://www.dataio.com/Company/About-...iversary/1980s

In other words the erase and reprogram could result in a less reliable
part than it was originally. I don't bother to refresh EPROMs, nor do I
replace them until they fail. Seems pointless to me to do anything
beyond double archiving the data.


I burn many classic EPROMs (2716s and up) and PROMs a month, so have
some experience in this matter.

John :-#)#

I understand the desire to do whatever you can to keep old equipment
working,
but this is getting mighty close to, "if it ain't broke, don't fix it."

There is a awful lot to be said for "if it ain't broke, don't fix it.".
I see many game boards and arcade games where the owner thought it was a
good idea to replace things that were still working. This sometimes
results in an unrepairable (too many mistakes = too many hours to
repair) game as they have made too many mistakes.

John :-#)#

Greetings John,
I just went through three weeks of frustration fixing this machine
tool. The control maker, FANUC, said the problem was most likely not
any part of the control. The lathe maker, Miyano, who married the
control with the lathe said the problem was not likely to be on the
machine side. The guy I spoke with at Miyano said that the lathes
hardly ever need major work because they are so well built. And he is
correct. The machine is a great machine. So good in fact that it would
be worth it to put a new control on the thing if the old control
failed. The problem turned out to be a circuit board that interfaces
with the lathe. I bought a used board and swapped the EPROMs and now
the machine is running again. FANUC says that the EPROMs on the board
are hard to find replacements for so I want to get copies made. Since
you copy many a month I was wondering if you do this service for
others or just yourself. It might be less risky to pay and expert than
to do the copying myself.
Eric


Hi Eric,

I do archive EPROMs ($15US each plus shipping) however there are a some
potential risks in shipping them to me.

1) My shop is in Canada - and Fedex/UPS/DHL all charge my shop customs
import fees that can reach $40US. We normally have Americans (I am
assuming you are in the USA) ship stuff to us by US Post as the import
fees (if that happens) is around $7US.

2) Stuff gets lost in transit. Rare, but can you afford to lose the EPROMs?

3) Handling. Do you have anti-static foam and an anti-static bag, or IC
anti-static tubes that you can ship these in?

What city are you in? I can ask on the Data I/O mail list to see if
anyone in your city can help you. Likely a small case of beer or bottle
of wine would suffice for that person...

John :-#)#

Greetings John,
I didn't know you were in Canada. I'm in Clinton which is on the south
end of Whidbey Island. I'm north of Seattle about 30 miles as the crow
(supposedly) flies. Pretty much anywhere in the Puget Sound area is OK
and I am willing to drive, along with a case beer or some good wine,
to get the things copied. Maybe I can even do a little machine work
for someone. Thanks a bunch for making the offer to contact someone.
Cheers,
Eric
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Default EPROMs nearing end of life?

On 2017/04/03 6:02 PM, wrote:
On Mon, 3 Apr 2017 16:48:00 -0700, John Robertson
wrote:

On 2017/04/03 3:18 PM,
wrote:
On Mon, 3 Apr 2017 12:35:41 -0700, John Robertson
wrote:

On 2017/04/03 11:20 AM, mike wrote:
On 4/3/2017 10:21 AM, John Robertson wrote:
On 2017/04/03 9:59 AM, tom wrote:
wrote in message
...
The EPROMs in one of my machines are at least 32 years old. Reading
online about EPROMs it seems that maybe my old devices are nearing the
end of the life of the memory contents. So I'm thinking I should copy
or have copied the data in these old devices. Am I right?
Thanks,
Eric

Definitely make a copy. Then program a second copy of the EPROMS and
swap
them in to confirm the copy. If the copies are good, erase and
reprogram the
originals and keep as a spare.

Also replace any memory backup batteries while you are there.

You will probably be dead before you need the copies.



EPROMs are quite stable in my experience, however backing up and using
the second set of EPROMs to run the product seems reasonable if a bit of
overkill. Make a copy, archive it off-site and keep your burner in a
safe place. I would simply use the originals until they gave me cause
for doubt.

Also - do not erase the originals, simply reprogram (refresh) them after
telling the programmer that the chips are not blank.

I'd like to hear the theory behind that.
Are you saying that a failed bit is never zero?
Is programming a zero to zero the equivalent of twice the
program pulse width? Is that less stressful than an erase?

EPROMs have a
limited number of erase/burn cycles so why knock one cycle off? I do
find that a number of originally good EPROMs (that had valid data) fail
to reprogram after being erased.

If it's that close to failure, wouldn't you want to learn that now?

No, if the thing is working why bother? Erasing and reprogramming
doesn't prove anything and your burner may not do as good a job as the
factory's rather expensive EPROM burner - which was likely a DATA 1/O 29
series with Gang Pack or possibly the DATA I/O Gang Programmer model 120
(early 80s).

http://www.dataio.com/Company/About-...iversary/1980s

In other words the erase and reprogram could result in a less reliable
part than it was originally. I don't bother to refresh EPROMs, nor do I
replace them until they fail. Seems pointless to me to do anything
beyond double archiving the data.


I burn many classic EPROMs (2716s and up) and PROMs a month, so have
some experience in this matter.

John :-#)#

I understand the desire to do whatever you can to keep old equipment
working,
but this is getting mighty close to, "if it ain't broke, don't fix it."

There is a awful lot to be said for "if it ain't broke, don't fix it.".
I see many game boards and arcade games where the owner thought it was a
good idea to replace things that were still working. This sometimes
results in an unrepairable (too many mistakes = too many hours to
repair) game as they have made too many mistakes.

John :-#)#
Greetings John,
I just went through three weeks of frustration fixing this machine
tool. The control maker, FANUC, said the problem was most likely not
any part of the control. The lathe maker, Miyano, who married the
control with the lathe said the problem was not likely to be on the
machine side. The guy I spoke with at Miyano said that the lathes
hardly ever need major work because they are so well built. And he is
correct. The machine is a great machine. So good in fact that it would
be worth it to put a new control on the thing if the old control
failed. The problem turned out to be a circuit board that interfaces
with the lathe. I bought a used board and swapped the EPROMs and now
the machine is running again. FANUC says that the EPROMs on the board
are hard to find replacements for so I want to get copies made. Since
you copy many a month I was wondering if you do this service for
others or just yourself. It might be less risky to pay and expert than
to do the copying myself.
Eric


Hi Eric,

I do archive EPROMs ($15US each plus shipping) however there are a some
potential risks in shipping them to me.

1) My shop is in Canada - and Fedex/UPS/DHL all charge my shop customs
import fees that can reach $40US. We normally have Americans (I am
assuming you are in the USA) ship stuff to us by US Post as the import
fees (if that happens) is around $7US.

2) Stuff gets lost in transit. Rare, but can you afford to lose the EPROMs?

3) Handling. Do you have anti-static foam and an anti-static bag, or IC
anti-static tubes that you can ship these in?

What city are you in? I can ask on the Data I/O mail list to see if
anyone in your city can help you. Likely a small case of beer or bottle
of wine would suffice for that person...

John :-#)#

Greetings John,
I didn't know you were in Canada. I'm in Clinton which is on the south
end of Whidbey Island. I'm north of Seattle about 30 miles as the crow
(supposedly) flies. Pretty much anywhere in the Puget Sound area is OK
and I am willing to drive, along with a case beer or some good wine,
to get the things copied. Maybe I can even do a little machine work
for someone. Thanks a bunch for making the offer to contact someone.
Cheers,
Eric


If you want to come North to Canada and visit my shop I'm sure we can
work something out.

Note that unless you are a refugee you do have to go back...

John ;-#)#

--
(Please post followups or tech inquiries to the USENET newsgroup)
John's Jukes Ltd. 2343 Main St., Vancouver, BC, Canada V5T 3C9
(604)872-5757 or Fax 872-2010 (Pinballs, Jukes, Video Games)
www.flippers.com
"Old pinballers never die, they just flip out."


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Posted to sci.electronics.repair
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Posts: 2,163
Default EPROMs nearing end of life?

On Tue, 4 Apr 2017 11:06:50 -0700, John Robertson
wrote:

On 2017/04/03 6:02 PM, wrote:
On Mon, 3 Apr 2017 16:48:00 -0700, John Robertson
wrote:

On 2017/04/03 3:18 PM,
wrote:
On Mon, 3 Apr 2017 12:35:41 -0700, John Robertson
wrote:

On 2017/04/03 11:20 AM, mike wrote:
On 4/3/2017 10:21 AM, John Robertson wrote:
On 2017/04/03 9:59 AM, tom wrote:
wrote in message
...
The EPROMs in one of my machines are at least 32 years old. Reading
online about EPROMs it seems that maybe my old devices are nearing the
end of the life of the memory contents. So I'm thinking I should copy
or have copied the data in these old devices. Am I right?
Thanks,
Eric

Definitely make a copy. Then program a second copy of the EPROMS and
swap
them in to confirm the copy. If the copies are good, erase and
reprogram the
originals and keep as a spare.

Also replace any memory backup batteries while you are there.

You will probably be dead before you need the copies.



EPROMs are quite stable in my experience, however backing up and using
the second set of EPROMs to run the product seems reasonable if a bit of
overkill. Make a copy, archive it off-site and keep your burner in a
safe place. I would simply use the originals until they gave me cause
for doubt.

Also - do not erase the originals, simply reprogram (refresh) them after
telling the programmer that the chips are not blank.

I'd like to hear the theory behind that.
Are you saying that a failed bit is never zero?
Is programming a zero to zero the equivalent of twice the
program pulse width? Is that less stressful than an erase?

EPROMs have a
limited number of erase/burn cycles so why knock one cycle off? I do
find that a number of originally good EPROMs (that had valid data) fail
to reprogram after being erased.

If it's that close to failure, wouldn't you want to learn that now?

No, if the thing is working why bother? Erasing and reprogramming
doesn't prove anything and your burner may not do as good a job as the
factory's rather expensive EPROM burner - which was likely a DATA 1/O 29
series with Gang Pack or possibly the DATA I/O Gang Programmer model 120
(early 80s).

http://www.dataio.com/Company/About-...iversary/1980s

In other words the erase and reprogram could result in a less reliable
part than it was originally. I don't bother to refresh EPROMs, nor do I
replace them until they fail. Seems pointless to me to do anything
beyond double archiving the data.


I burn many classic EPROMs (2716s and up) and PROMs a month, so have
some experience in this matter.

John :-#)#

I understand the desire to do whatever you can to keep old equipment
working,
but this is getting mighty close to, "if it ain't broke, don't fix it."

There is a awful lot to be said for "if it ain't broke, don't fix it.".
I see many game boards and arcade games where the owner thought it was a
good idea to replace things that were still working. This sometimes
results in an unrepairable (too many mistakes = too many hours to
repair) game as they have made too many mistakes.

John :-#)#
Greetings John,
I just went through three weeks of frustration fixing this machine
tool. The control maker, FANUC, said the problem was most likely not
any part of the control. The lathe maker, Miyano, who married the
control with the lathe said the problem was not likely to be on the
machine side. The guy I spoke with at Miyano said that the lathes
hardly ever need major work because they are so well built. And he is
correct. The machine is a great machine. So good in fact that it would
be worth it to put a new control on the thing if the old control
failed. The problem turned out to be a circuit board that interfaces
with the lathe. I bought a used board and swapped the EPROMs and now
the machine is running again. FANUC says that the EPROMs on the board
are hard to find replacements for so I want to get copies made. Since
you copy many a month I was wondering if you do this service for
others or just yourself. It might be less risky to pay and expert than
to do the copying myself.
Eric


Hi Eric,

I do archive EPROMs ($15US each plus shipping) however there are a some
potential risks in shipping them to me.

1) My shop is in Canada - and Fedex/UPS/DHL all charge my shop customs
import fees that can reach $40US. We normally have Americans (I am
assuming you are in the USA) ship stuff to us by US Post as the import
fees (if that happens) is around $7US.

2) Stuff gets lost in transit. Rare, but can you afford to lose the EPROMs?

3) Handling. Do you have anti-static foam and an anti-static bag, or IC
anti-static tubes that you can ship these in?

What city are you in? I can ask on the Data I/O mail list to see if
anyone in your city can help you. Likely a small case of beer or bottle
of wine would suffice for that person...

John :-#)#

Greetings John,
I didn't know you were in Canada. I'm in Clinton which is on the south
end of Whidbey Island. I'm north of Seattle about 30 miles as the crow
(supposedly) flies. Pretty much anywhere in the Puget Sound area is OK
and I am willing to drive, along with a case beer or some good wine,
to get the things copied. Maybe I can even do a little machine work
for someone. Thanks a bunch for making the offer to contact someone.
Cheers,
Eric


If you want to come North to Canada and visit my shop I'm sure we can
work something out.

Note that unless you are a refugee you do have to go back...

John ;-#)#

That's a little longer of a drive than I was considering. And I've
heard that the border crossing is even worse than the summer ferry
lines to Whidbey. On the other hand my wife and I like Canada and
Canadians. And Vancouver. Years ago we went to Vancouver to see the
Phantom of the Opera musical. We had booked a room at a small but
pretty swanky hotel. I have forgotten the name though. Anyway, when we
tried to check in our room was occupied. They had goofed but didn't
tell us. They said there was a slight delay in getting the room ready
and asked us to wait in the bar with drinks on the house. After a
couple hours my wife and I were getting impatient. So we asked when
the room would be ready and they explained their goof up. Unable to
find us a room comparable to the one we reserved they instead put us
up in the penthouse. I don't even want to know how much that room was
per night. It was certainly very nice, with a bedroom, two bathrooms,
a living room, a long balcony, and a kitchen. Canadian hospitality,
gotta love it.
Eric
  #12   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 907
Default EPROMs nearing end of life?

On 2017/04/04 5:47 PM, wrote:
On Tue, 4 Apr 2017 11:06:50 -0700, John Robertson
wrote:

On 2017/04/03 6:02 PM,
wrote:
On Mon, 3 Apr 2017 16:48:00 -0700, John Robertson
wrote:

On 2017/04/03 3:18 PM,
wrote:
On Mon, 3 Apr 2017 12:35:41 -0700, John Robertson
wrote:

On 2017/04/03 11:20 AM, mike wrote:
On 4/3/2017 10:21 AM, John Robertson wrote:
On 2017/04/03 9:59 AM, tom wrote:
wrote in message
...
The EPROMs in one of my machines are at least 32 years old. Reading
online about EPROMs it seems that maybe my old devices are nearing the
end of the life of the memory contents. So I'm thinking I should copy
or have copied the data in these old devices. Am I right?
Thanks,
Eric

Definitely make a copy. Then program a second copy of the EPROMS and
swap
them in to confirm the copy. If the copies are good, erase and
reprogram the
originals and keep as a spare.

Also replace any memory backup batteries while you are there.

You will probably be dead before you need the copies.



EPROMs are quite stable in my experience, however backing up and using
the second set of EPROMs to run the product seems reasonable if a bit of
overkill. Make a copy, archive it off-site and keep your burner in a
safe place. I would simply use the originals until they gave me cause
for doubt.

Also - do not erase the originals, simply reprogram (refresh) them after
telling the programmer that the chips are not blank.

I'd like to hear the theory behind that.
Are you saying that a failed bit is never zero?
Is programming a zero to zero the equivalent of twice the
program pulse width? Is that less stressful than an erase?

EPROMs have a
limited number of erase/burn cycles so why knock one cycle off? I do
find that a number of originally good EPROMs (that had valid data) fail
to reprogram after being erased.

If it's that close to failure, wouldn't you want to learn that now?

No, if the thing is working why bother? Erasing and reprogramming
doesn't prove anything and your burner may not do as good a job as the
factory's rather expensive EPROM burner - which was likely a DATA 1/O 29
series with Gang Pack or possibly the DATA I/O Gang Programmer model 120
(early 80s).

http://www.dataio.com/Company/About-...iversary/1980s

In other words the erase and reprogram could result in a less reliable
part than it was originally. I don't bother to refresh EPROMs, nor do I
replace them until they fail. Seems pointless to me to do anything
beyond double archiving the data.


I burn many classic EPROMs (2716s and up) and PROMs a month, so have
some experience in this matter.

John :-#)#

I understand the desire to do whatever you can to keep old equipment
working,
but this is getting mighty close to, "if it ain't broke, don't fix it."

There is a awful lot to be said for "if it ain't broke, don't fix it.".
I see many game boards and arcade games where the owner thought it was a
good idea to replace things that were still working. This sometimes
results in an unrepairable (too many mistakes = too many hours to
repair) game as they have made too many mistakes.

John :-#)#
Greetings John,
I just went through three weeks of frustration fixing this machine
tool. The control maker, FANUC, said the problem was most likely not
any part of the control. The lathe maker, Miyano, who married the
control with the lathe said the problem was not likely to be on the
machine side. The guy I spoke with at Miyano said that the lathes
hardly ever need major work because they are so well built. And he is
correct. The machine is a great machine. So good in fact that it would
be worth it to put a new control on the thing if the old control
failed. The problem turned out to be a circuit board that interfaces
with the lathe. I bought a used board and swapped the EPROMs and now
the machine is running again. FANUC says that the EPROMs on the board
are hard to find replacements for so I want to get copies made. Since
you copy many a month I was wondering if you do this service for
others or just yourself. It might be less risky to pay and expert than
to do the copying myself.
Eric


Hi Eric,

I do archive EPROMs ($15US each plus shipping) however there are a some
potential risks in shipping them to me.

1) My shop is in Canada - and Fedex/UPS/DHL all charge my shop customs
import fees that can reach $40US. We normally have Americans (I am
assuming you are in the USA) ship stuff to us by US Post as the import
fees (if that happens) is around $7US.

2) Stuff gets lost in transit. Rare, but can you afford to lose the EPROMs?

3) Handling. Do you have anti-static foam and an anti-static bag, or IC
anti-static tubes that you can ship these in?

What city are you in? I can ask on the Data I/O mail list to see if
anyone in your city can help you. Likely a small case of beer or bottle
of wine would suffice for that person...

John :-#)#
Greetings John,
I didn't know you were in Canada. I'm in Clinton which is on the south
end of Whidbey Island. I'm north of Seattle about 30 miles as the crow
(supposedly) flies. Pretty much anywhere in the Puget Sound area is OK
and I am willing to drive, along with a case beer or some good wine,
to get the things copied. Maybe I can even do a little machine work
for someone. Thanks a bunch for making the offer to contact someone.
Cheers,
Eric


If you want to come North to Canada and visit my shop I'm sure we can
work something out.

Note that unless you are a refugee you do have to go back...

John ;-#)#

That's a little longer of a drive than I was considering. And I've
heard that the border crossing is even worse than the summer ferry
lines to Whidbey. On the other hand my wife and I like Canada and
Canadians. And Vancouver. Years ago we went to Vancouver to see the
Phantom of the Opera musical. We had booked a room at a small but
pretty swanky hotel. I have forgotten the name though. Anyway, when we
tried to check in our room was occupied. They had goofed but didn't
tell us. They said there was a slight delay in getting the room ready
and asked us to wait in the bar with drinks on the house. After a
couple hours my wife and I were getting impatient. So we asked when
the room would be ready and they explained their goof up. Unable to
find us a room comparable to the one we reserved they instead put us
up in the penthouse. I don't even want to know how much that room was
per night. It was certainly very nice, with a bedroom, two bathrooms,
a living room, a long balcony, and a kitchen. Canadian hospitality,
gotta love it.
Eric


My wife and I went down twice to the US (Burlington area) to adopt a
rescue dog (A nice Saluki!) and both times the border crossings were
under 20 minutes. This was on the last two Wednesdays in March. Weekends
can have long lineups - sometimes up to an hour. Holidays are worse.
There are signs showing you an estimated wait time as you approach the
border (both sides) and you can go one of the two alternate truck
crossings where the time may be shorter.

Hope you like playing pinball!

John :-#)#

--
(Please post followups or tech inquiries to the USENET newsgroup)
John's Jukes Ltd. 2343 Main St., Vancouver, BC, Canada V5T 3C9
(604)872-5757 or Fax 872-2010 (Pinballs, Jukes, Video Games)
www.flippers.com
"Old pinballers never die, they just flip out."
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Default EPROMs nearing end of life?

When I worked for a paper mill we had a machine lose memory, lightning storm I think. The Allen Bradley PLC had an EEPROM backup so we uploaded the program from it.

Counterintuitively to the maintenance section, "upload" to A-B means upload FROM the PLC, not TO the PLC. So we loaded the empty program into the EPROM, erasing it.

Not a problem, we had another EEPROM safely locked in a cabinet in the office.

Of course we repeated the same mistake on our only backup.

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Default EPROMs nearing end of life?

On 2017/04/06 6:45 AM, Tim R wrote:
When I worked for a paper mill we had a machine lose memory, lightning storm I think. The Allen Bradley PLC had an EEPROM backup so we uploaded the program from it.

Counterintuitively to the maintenance section, "upload" to A-B means upload FROM the PLC, not TO the PLC. So we loaded the empty program into the EPROM, erasing it.

Not a problem, we had another EEPROM safely locked in a cabinet in the office.

Of course we repeated the same mistake on our only backup.


Ouch. I have done similar mistakes. That is why I have both on site and
off site backups these days.

John :-#(#

--
(Please post followups or tech inquiries to the USENET newsgroup)
John's Jukes Ltd. 2343 Main St., Vancouver, BC, Canada V5T 3C9
(604)872-5757 or Fax 872-2010 (Pinballs, Jukes, Video Games)
www.flippers.com
"Old pinballers never die, they just flip out."


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Posts: 1,630
Default EPROMs nearing end of life?

"I just went through three weeks of frustration fixing this machine
tool. "

I've found that usually corrupt data is caused by the circuitry, not the EEPROM itself. However your unit is old enough it may have actually failed. When things get old, things get weird sometimes. You see extremely uncommon failure modes and sometimes those "gremlins".

Where I used to work they bought an EEPROM copier cheap. Maybe twenty bucks, but it could not do everything. It did what we needed but it did say that certain types of chips need to be erased before they can be copied onto. The ones in the equipment we worked on did not need to be erased.

These units have a mechanical power switch, so I suspect that sometime the corruption is from turning it off at the wrong time. They are Karaoke players and usually the USB and SD puts became deaf dumb and blind. I had a whole set of them with good data to copy from.

I am somewhat surprised you found a used board for that thing. But since you did you probably should copy the data to either the old EEPROM or a new, compatible one for backup. If it happens once, it can happen again.

I really hadn't heard of that brad of lathe, but if it has Timken bearing, hardened ways and all that it is probably worth keeping for life. That is if you have a use for it. I used to have two lathes but then realized they had been used maybe once in five years I sold them off. Plus I need the room..
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Default EPROMs nearing end of life?

"1) My shop is in Canada - and Fedex/UPS/DHL all charge my shop customs
import fees that can reach $40US. We normally have Americans (I am
assuming you are in the USA) ship stuff to us by US Post as the import
fees (if that happens) is around $7US. "

What happened to NAFTA ? Is that only for stuff coming into the US ?
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Default EPROMs nearing end of life?

On Sun, 9 Apr 2017 10:21:07 -0700 (PDT), wrote:

"I just went through three weeks of frustration fixing this machine

tool. "

I've found that usually corrupt data is caused by the circuitry, not the EEPROM itself. However your unit is old enough it may have actually failed. When things get old, things get weird sometimes. You see extremely uncommon failure modes and sometimes those "gremlins".

Where I used to work they bought an EEPROM copier cheap. Maybe twenty bucks, but it could not do everything. It did what we needed but it did say that certain types of chips need to be erased before they can be copied onto. The ones in the equipment we worked on did not need to be erased.

These units have a mechanical power switch, so I suspect that sometime the corruption is from turning it off at the wrong time. They are Karaoke players and usually the USB and SD puts became deaf dumb and blind. I had a whole set of them with good data to copy from.

I am somewhat surprised you found a used board for that thing. But since you did you probably should copy the data to either the old EEPROM or a new, compatible one for backup. If it happens once, it can happen again.

I really hadn't heard of that brad of lathe, but if it has Timken bearing, hardened ways and all that it is probably worth keeping for life. That is if you have a use for it. I used to have two lathes but then realized they had been used maybe once in five years I sold them off. Plus I need the room.

The lathe is a great machine and a real money maker. When it runs that
is. 15 HP spindle. One type of job I do on it, 3 and 5 inch diameter
sheaves made from 6061 aluminum, sends the spindle load meter to 120%
for each of the roughing cuts. The chips coming off spray the door
like a sandblaster. Man, I love hearing that. The Miyano rep told me
that they hardly ever need mechanical servicing. The spindle cartridge
is designed so that as it heats up it doesn't expand into the
machining envelope so there is no dimensional change to parts in the Z
axis. Right now I am running a part, also from 6061, that has almost
all the material removed. I load 4 foot long 1.25" diameter stock in
the spindle tube. 2 inches stick out from the collet. The part ends
up being 1.65" long, .25" daimeter but for a .200 thick knurled disc
near the middle. After the machining is done the piece is parted off
and a parts catcher swings out, catches the part, and drops it in a
tray outside of the machining envelope. Cycle time is 47 seconds.
Another job I do is cutting an o-ring groove on the underside of
1/4-20 flat head 304 stainless screws. The groove is normal to the 82
degree included angle of the head. The groove edges have a .004"
radius machined on them to avoid sharp edges. 7 second cycle time.
I'm gonna have to get the EPROMS copied soon as possible. First though
I need to get all the late jobs finished.
Eric
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