BillO wrote:
I have in my enhanced Apple IIe a Rockwell branded 65C02 with a date code 0f 0815. According to what your saying it's a fake. However, it's not. It is a 65C02 and it's working just fine.
He's not saying it's not a 65C02 (or at least I hope he's not). He's just saying that it's been re-marked.
I suspect this is common. Remember
this post? There I show two
identically marked "Rockwell R65C02" chips, probably both from the same vendor, but one is CMOS and one is NMOS.
Quote:
What I can't get my head around is why some one would go to all the trouble of removing the existing printing on a working 65C02, then re-printing it. That makes absolutely no sense whatsoever. The Chinese are not that stupid. No one is.
No, you've got it backwards. Given a few thousand "6502" parts pulled off of a large pile of e-waste, it's cheaper to simply re-mark them all and sell them than to test each one (or even look at the labels on them) to see if it should be re-marked and then re-mark only those. It will probably be mostly NMOS chips, with some CMOS ones thrown in, and even some 40-pin chips that aren't 6502s at all, but when you're selling them to vendors for a dollar or less each, who cares? Mark them as 1 MHz parts and most will work well enough for all the hobbyists out there.
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However, some company wishing to supply a demand and with the rights to the Rockwell logo contracting NXP to make IC's for them fits exactly with the NXP business model and is quite a reasonable situation.
That's certainly possible, but doesn't seem likely for chips being sold at retail for under $2 each. Who even has rights to use the Rockwell logo?