20230528 The Problem with Mature Products

20230528 The Problem with Mature Products

Since a few days ago, the Programmer started to give me problems where it was unable to prep fresh chips. In other words, I could not clear the microcontroller’s memory so that it could be programmed. At first, I thought it was the plug-in programming cable but after using my DIY Programmer adaptor, it was clear that the fault lies in the Programmer.

CAN IT BE REPAIRED?

Years ago, I replaced the inductor and got it working again. It was displaying the same symptoms which I completely forgot until the Internet pointed back to my Blog entry. Alas, try as I might, there is no circuit diagram for the Programmer, and my last repair was more or less by luck. I can try to repair again or, I can get another used Programmer off eBay…

20230528 The Problem with Mature Products
This is the PICStartPlus programmer which I bought at the turn of the Century. About 8 years later, it was declared as a matured product and support slowly trickled into non-existence… Anyway, from the image above, the inductor seems to be a 100uH with a ±5% tolerance. But if you look at the two SMD capacitors, their surface has some brownish coating on them. The value reaads, “100, 16s, 7LN” and I know they’re 100uF but are they 16v?

HOW NOW, BROWN COW?

For the time being, I need to erase the chip a few times, get an all clear to program. Rinse and repeat until I get an ‘OK’ from the programming software. Its a little tedious but this is as good as it gets until I can get more information about the components. The funny thing is, I can hear some inductor hum but it could very well be the capacitors since the replaced inductor has no coils.

Posted in A Piscean Works Blog, Electronics, Microchip PIC, Microcontroller, Programming.

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