| Electronics > Repair |
| How to Program a Dallas DS1245W? This is a 3.3V Device. |
| (1/1) |
| calibrationfixture:
Hi to All, Contrary to the 5V Versions, my Batronix Programmer doesn't cover these 3.3V Versions. I could lower the Vcc with two Diodes in series and make the Vcc connection out of the ZIF-Socket. A legitimate solution? Thanks in advance for any insights. Calibrationfixture |
| Ian.M:
No. The datasheet says: --- Quote ---ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS Voltage on Any Pin Relative to Ground -0.3V to +4.6V --- End quote --- which means the address, data and control pins are *NOT* 5V tolerant. If the programmer is using 5V Vcc with CMOS thresholds, it will overdrive the Dallas DS1245W pins. |
| coromonadalix:
@calibration there was no need to restart a thread about your equipment, your diluting the subject into many parts, many are doing this nowadays and it get really annoying to follow just find a programmer for it TL866A or CS, TL866II, Xeltec and others can do it, arduinos projects can do some of them etc ... |
| DonKu:
--- Quote from: Ian.M on January 18, 2025, 03:00:24 pm ---No. The datasheet says: --- Quote ---ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS Voltage on Any Pin Relative to Ground -0.3V to +4.6V --- End quote --- which means the address, data and control pins are *NOT* 5V tolerant. If the programmer is using 5V Vcc with CMOS thresholds, it will overdrive the Dallas DS1245W pins. --- End quote --- If you have the time, it's fairly easy to construct a DIY bi-directional voltage level shifter: |
| Ian.M:
True, but will a simple discrete MOSFET level shifter be fast enough for a programmer running a RAM chip definition, that wont have any extra delays? Its probably easier to breadboard a dedicated 'burner' using any 3.3V Arduino with enough I/Os. |
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