Thanks for all the information. The list is once again a wealth of knowledge. 
I'll look into the other boards.
Kurt
 

    On Tuesday, June 14, 2016 10:18 AM, Brian White <[email protected]> wrote:
 

 A 27C256 is problematical in the option rom socket because you can't reprogram 
it once you solder it. Or at least it would be pretty hard to squeeze the 
couple extra components to handle the Vpp pin so that it is tied to Vcc (or gdn 
or no-connect, I forget what it needs right now, other than that it should 
*not* be connected to any of the socket legs) during normal run-time operation, 
but not tied to Vcc and instead *is* routed to an edge contact for programming. 
The 28C256 board can do it because the chip is SOIC package and there is 
physically room for the parts.There is no such thing as a SOIC 27C256, or at 
least not an erasable one. Burning and soldering a chip as a one-way trip is 
not really hobbyist friendly. You risk wasting $6 chips and having to 
de-solder, clean, and resolder chips on the board for every mistake or testing 
another rom.It's different if you're producing 100 copies of the same thing to 
sell. You don't care about re-writing then. But in that case you have the 
resources to just whip up your own new board any time you want. A few different 
similar board designs are public that you can download and copy, and even the 
cad software is free (kicad). Edit and upload to osh park and order as set for 
$6.But I suggest just use the SOIC v2.0 28C256 board. And get the option rom 
programming adapter v2 at the same time. And some singlenrow machined round pin 
headers for the programming adapter.Or use the m100 board (Stephen's, not 
FigTroniX) and use the option rom feature on that. It goes in the main rom 
socket inside, not in the option rom socket, and it can provide both a main and 
option rom in one uv-erasable 28 pin dip 27C512.-- 
bkwOn Jun 14, 2016 11:42 AM, "Stephen Adolph" <[email protected]> wrote:

ah sorry I missed that.  yah it is for main rom socket. not optrom.
but it can provide optrom.

On Tue, Jun 14, 2016 at 11:35 AM, Kurt McCullum <[email protected]> wrote:
> Would it just need to be cut down to fit into a 102 or 200 optrom slot? I
> suppose since the 200 has a regular socket for its main ROM it might work as
> is.
>
>
>
> On Tuesday, June 14, 2016 8:20 AM, Stephen Adolph <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>
> the M100ROM board supports 27C256..
>
> On Tue, Jun 14, 2016 at 10:58 AM, Kurt McCullum <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>> There have been a few new adapter boards for the OptRom slot of the
>> 100/102/200. I notice that none of them support a standard 27C256 EPROM. I
>> know these boards used to be available, along with the wrap around
>> flexible
>> circuit boards used by Traveling Software. Does anybody know of an OSHPark
>> design that exists?
>>
>> Kurt
>
>



  

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