Just to follow up:
I have managed to get sockets and most of the ICs. A few still remains, and passives as well.
Anyway, I recently found out that the MK4096 DRAM is a troublesome component with up to 50% fail rate. For that reason I had to build a MK4096 memory tester (as I couldn’t find any). The 4096 was the first address multiplexed DRAM with CAS and RAS pins. It might be the reason for its strickt timing spec which meant that I had to get a really fast MPU to test it. My choice was the STM32 with the Nucleo board (F401 version) that had an arduino-like shield port and ran at 84MHz. I was able to use the arduino IDE with STM32duino library and access the IO ports directly using assembly code.
A couple of weeks work, and I had all pins connected and a 12ns IO control accuracy that was enough to get the CAS low to RAS low strobe within the needed +/- 25ns. All-in-all, 10 million random write/read cycles take around 10 seconds, and about 35 seconds for nearby flip-bit checking.
The 18 memory chips I bought for 175USD all passed the tests, which was a reward in itself.
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File comment: A nucleo STM32 board with a ZIF socket and some batteries.
C568B9F7-BA5E-41A9-97D0-4B0E09BA7547.jpeg [ 3.48 MiB | Viewed 2957 times ]
The proto MK4096 tester with 12ns IO resolution. Probably useable to test alot of other RAM configurations.