Quote:
[I] am wondering if I can determine with some certainty that the RAM chip is at fault
To me, the symptoms described in the lead post strongly suggest that RAM chip U9 is defective. The only faintly puzzling detail is that the KIM, "seems to take a minute or so and multiple resets to settle down." But I imagine a broken bond wire could cause that behavior. Inside the IC's plastic package the actual die would have a no-connect on the A3 input, causing that input to float, and it's plausible that it would take some time to settle down.
-- Jeff
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In 1988 my 65C02 got six new registers and 44 new full-speed instructions!
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