AVR ATMEGA16 Minimum System Board ATmega32 Development Board + USB ISP USBasp Programmer ISP ATTiny 51 Board and PLCC32 to DIP32 EZ Programmer Adapter Socket
Hi all,
Very very new to all this...
I bought the above with the intentions on flashing a bios file to a PL-CC 32 socket chip. I have spent a good amount of time getting nowhere unfortunately. With all the guides I found and advice I have seen on other peoples forum posts I havent progresed very far.
So far I have only managed to flash the latest firmware to the USBasp - after that I can't get any programs show that they are successfully connected to the USBasp.
I am obviously missing something or doing something wrong but I just can't work out what it is.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. I have purposley not put any information about any errors etc... I have had as I have seen other forum posts get a bit confusing as people have had a lot of different opinons on the errors they got.
At this moment in time I am just looking for help on where to go next after flashing the lastest firmware to the USBasp.
This is the equipment I am using...
Thank you all in advance
AVR ATMEGA16 Minimum System Board ATmega32 Development Board + USB ISP USBasp Programmer ISP ATTiny 51 Board
-
- Posts: 1
- Joined: Fri Sep 29, 2023 12:46 pm
AVR ATMEGA16 Minimum System Board ATmega32 Development Board + USB ISP USBasp Programmer ISP ATTiny 51 Board
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
-
- Posts: 3
- Joined: Wed Aug 27, 2014 2:03 pm
- Location: Gateshead, England
Re: AVR ATMEGA16 Minimum System Board ATmega32 Development Board + USB ISP USBasp Programmer ISP ATTiny 51 Board
Hi randompunk,
what type of BIOS memory chip are you attempting to program?
Modern motherboards use serial SPI flash chips, which are typically 8-pin devices. Every 32-pin PLCC memory device I have ever seen uses a parallel programmer not a serial programmer like the USBASP programmer, but that doesn't mean that they don't exist.
The PLCC-32 to DIP-32 converter is designed for parallel programmers that have Zero Insertion Force (ZIF) sockets.
If you need to program a serial programming interface (SPI) memory then the USBASP programmer can do that but you will require an 8-pin socket (or a breadboard) and the AVRDude programming software.
If you need to program an old style PLCC Flash Memory then you will probably need a parallel programmer and associated software. A parallel programmer is considerably more expensive than a serial programmer.
what type of BIOS memory chip are you attempting to program?
Modern motherboards use serial SPI flash chips, which are typically 8-pin devices. Every 32-pin PLCC memory device I have ever seen uses a parallel programmer not a serial programmer like the USBASP programmer, but that doesn't mean that they don't exist.
The PLCC-32 to DIP-32 converter is designed for parallel programmers that have Zero Insertion Force (ZIF) sockets.
If you need to program a serial programming interface (SPI) memory then the USBASP programmer can do that but you will require an 8-pin socket (or a breadboard) and the AVRDude programming software.
If you need to program an old style PLCC Flash Memory then you will probably need a parallel programmer and associated software. A parallel programmer is considerably more expensive than a serial programmer.