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 True USB Willem Programmer (GQ-2X,3X,4X & GQ-4x4)
 What is the largest Tsop chip supported by Gq-4x?
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dgdiniz

10 Posts

Posted - 10/30/2015 :  08:14:54  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Hi, with the gq-4x I can program 32Mb Tsop chips, like 29f032, but are there some 64/128/256Mb Tsop chips supported by gq-4x? Or the maximum supported is 32Mb?

Thanks
Reply #1

ZLM

2945 Posts

Posted - 11/03/2015 :  17:38:36  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
It is possible to program a none NAND flash TSOP chip. Regardless chip capacity.
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Reply #2

dgdiniz

10 Posts

Posted - 11/04/2015 :  06:35:42  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
And about NOR-flash? What is the largest chip supported? Could you give an example of a 64/128Mb chip supported by gq-4x?
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Reply #3

ZLM

2945 Posts

Posted - 11/07/2015 :  23:09:09  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
The GQ-4X has A0-A23 address lines. So, for the parallel chip, it can be support up to 4 GB.

However, the address line can be expended by adapter.

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Reply #4

chadbh74

USA
28 Posts

Posted - 12/21/2015 :  14:29:10  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Is there an adapter that expands the GQ-4X beyond the A23 line? I'm guessing some shift registers would be used to implement this?

For standard A0-A23 lines, the binary math works out as follows...

A0 - 2 bytes
A1 - 4 bytes
A2 - 8 bytes
A3 - 16 bytes
A4 - 32 bytes
A5 - 64 bytes
A6 - 128 bytes
A7 - 256 bytes
A8 - 512 bytes
A9 - 1024 bytes (1K)
A10 - 2048 bytes (2K)
A11 - 4K
A12 - 8K
A13 - 16K
A14 - 32K
A15 - 64K
A16 - 128K
A17 - 256K
A18 - 512K
A19 - 1024K (1MB)
A20 - 2MB
A21 - 4MB
A22 - 8MB
A23 - 16MB

So largest as is with A0-A23 would be a 16MB (MegaBYTES) chip. Often times the datasheets will rate chips in MegaBITS, which takes 8 bites to make a byte so we're talking 8 x 16 = 128 megabits max.

A simple way to calculate the max bytes is 2 ^ (Number of lines)

i.e. A0-A23 = 24 lines = 2 ^ 24 = 16,777,216 bytes
16,777,216 bytes / 1024 bytes (1K) = 16,384K (Kilobytes)
16,384K / 1024K (1MB) = 16MB (Megabytes)

Of course serial chips could get around this easily as well.

- Chad H.
https://sites.google.com/site/cbhlab101

Edited by - chadbh74 on 12/21/2015 15:06:51
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Reply #5

anniel

2572 Posts

Posted - 12/21/2015 :  17:03:40  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Bigger chips use multiplexing I/O address allocation.

http://www.mcumall.com/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=6862

www.farnell.com/datasheets/1641689.pdf

Edited by - anniel on 12/22/2015 07:14:39
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Reply #6

chadbh74

USA
28 Posts

Posted - 12/22/2015 :  09:57:26  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Well that topic talks about the GQ-5X. Also, the datasheet is for a H27U4G8_6F2D or H27S4G8_6F2D and I can't find either one in the DEVICES.TXT for the GQ-4X. The OP asked for an example of a 64MB/128MB chip supported by the GQ-4X. I too have wondered about this as every one I have come across is NOT in the DEVICES.TXT file.

Take this chip for example JS28F00AM29EWHA (1Gbit, 128M x 8)www.micron.com/~/media/documents/products/data-sheet/nor-flash/parallel/m29ew/m29ew_256mb_2gb.pdf. I can find suport for this chip in more expensive programmers with ZIF48 sockets, but not in any that have just a ZIF40.

Perhaps support is possible with the right adapter though?

- Chad H.
https://sites.google.com/site/cbhlab101

Edited by - chadbh74 on 12/22/2015 10:07:03
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Reply #7

anniel

2572 Posts

Posted - 12/22/2015 :  12:10:41  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
I gave that as an exemple of multiplexing.
For your chip you can always switch the A24 and A25 lines manually and use an offset without a specific adaptor.
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