20250416 C&C Tesla Trooper: Reprogramming the Tesla Emitter

20250416 C&C Tesla Trooper: Reprogramming the Tesla Emitter

I am happy to report that the Solution worked. Earlier, I mentioned that there were two possible solutions. I would either redo the whole program or, switch the ports. Coming back from Work exhausted, I tried the latter and yeap, it worked.

The next thing is to re-program the chip and already being tired, I was in no mood to desolder it, clean it up, reprogram and then solder it back to the flexiPCB. What I did was to use the ICSP route and yeah, I had a good night’s sleep after that.

20250416 C&C Tesla Trooper: Reprogramming the Tesla Emitter
This is a simple SMD clip connector. On one end of the clip would be the 8 contacts that touches the mircocontroller’s legs. The other end would terminate into a small circuit board that mimics the layout of an 8-pin chip via long leads, which goes to the Programmer’s ZIF socket. The solution felt as if the 8-pin microcontroller has never left the SOIC adaptor. The two lit LEDs indirectly tells me that the programming link is good and works.
Posted in A Piscean Works Blog, Action Figure, Border Models, Computers, EaglePCB7.77, Electronics, Flowcode, JLCPCB, Microchip PIC, Microcontroller, Printed Circuit Board, Programming, Scale Lighting, Scale Models, Sci-Fi, Upgrade Parts.

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