Saturday, December 20, 2008
Monday, September 10, 2007
CPLD success

Apparently it helps when you:
- Install the ByteBlaster Driver (see the ByteBlaster II PDF)
- Choose ByteBlaster and not ByteBlasterMV (I have to unplug mine for this option to show up)
- Have continuity between the ByteBlaster and the CPLD.
Anyways... now I can see how close my customs are to the real deal....deals....(deals?).... eh you get the point.
"Can you read me?"
Picked up my programmable device and built my own ByteBlaster but can't seem to program the device. Comparing my byteblaster to the schematic found in the ByteBlaster II datasheet they appear to be different so I may have to modify mine so it looks to be the real thing. Stay tuned....
Tuesday, June 19, 2007
Breadboard goodness
Got the 08xx just about figured out. All I need now is a programmable replacement from www.fpgaarcade.com and I can see how close I am. Should also be a good starting point for the 10xx. The pinouts are identical so I suspect there may be some subtle internal differences to accommodate the z8002's Z-bus architecture.
Monday, June 4, 2007
Off and running again
Spent a few hours working on the Pole board that I have... did some praying...and got it working again.
Now on to the next custom....
Now on to the next custom....
Thursday, May 31, 2007
One step forward.. two steps back
Got custom 07xx figured out and was moving onto another when my board started flaking out. :-( Looks like I'll have to go over it and see if I can get it working again. Cloning this system without a 'golden board' is not impossible, but reverse engineering customs and especially comparing simulation to real hardware is going to be tricky.
Tuesday, May 1, 2007
Z8002 trace adapter
I was trying to debug the 4F/3F custom I/O and was quickly convinced that there's just not enough room to get grabbers on all the pins as well as some of the Z8002 signals I want to look at (help sme get a good overall understanding as to what the system is doing).
So I quickly whipped up a small PCB that will piggyback on the cpu socket and allow me to plug the pod connectors right on to it. Saves a ton of space and dozens of grabbers to boot.
So I quickly whipped up a small PCB that will piggyback on the cpu socket and allow me to plug the pod connectors right on to it. Saves a ton of space and dozens of grabbers to boot.
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