FYI - Alta Vista suggests some URL's below when you put in eprom
burner
This is a do-it-yourselfer proejct so cost should be reasonable.
<http://www.zws.com/products/epromr2/epromr_stage1.html>
These folks sell 'em.
<http://www.bipom.com/rommast.htm>
John O
vandegrift wrote:
>
> You could buy a black light - I've been told that they are UV (someone
> verify?), or (and I don't reccomend this unless someone can verify it...)
> try microwaving it on a really low microwave setting.
>
> Ross
>
> On Thu, 29 Apr 1999, Dustin Lang wrote:
>
> >
> > Hi,
> >
> > My apologies for this marginally topical post...
> >
> > I have an 8086 that I'd like to use for some embedded projects. One of
> > these is the dream of many linux people: the toaster that runs linux.
> > Hehe... 'telnet toaster'... Anyways, I have a bunch of EPROMs that I'd
> > like to program, but I can't get the silly things to erase. They're
> > supposed to be UV-erasable, but I don't have a good source of UV. I tried
> > sunlight but apparently the ozone is too thick here. Can anyone suggest a
> > source of UV suitable for erasing EPROMs, preferably without too much skin
> > cancer :)
> >
> > Thanks,
> > dstn.
> >
> > -----------------------------------------------
> > -- Dustin Lang, [EMAIL PROTECTED] --
> > (java developer, linux guy, green-haired freak)
> >
> > Why Linux is so cool: /usr/include/string.h:190:
> > /* Sautee STRING briskly. */
> > extern char *strfry __P ((char *__string));
> > -----------------------------------------------
> >