So I tested (just with NOPs and an ammeter) the rest of my 6502s (except for the ones in computers), and it was interesting.
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- The R65C02P3 and R65C02P2 at the top draw about 1.3 mA, and even at 4 MHz the clock output and A0 are quite clean. (Adding a bypass cap at the Vcc input did help all the CPUs quite a lot. :-P) Date codes are 9529 and 9208; both are clearly well-used chips, no doubt pulls from something.
- Of the two R65C02Ps below that, both look identical (the slight difference in colour in the picture is due to the lighting) and have exactly the same markings, both in the numbers and the font/logo. But the upper one draws 3.7 mA and has clean edges even at 4 MHz; the lower one draws 102 mA and the Φ2 rising edge starts to get slow at 2 MHz, becoming useless at 4 MHz. (I tested both twice, because I at first thought I must have confused a chip.)
- Of the two R65C02P4s at the bottom, side by side, the right-hand one is the one I tested earlier, and the left-hand one tests out the same: they draw around 100 mA and Φ2 again goes downhill at 2 MHz and is terrible at 4 MHz.
The interesting thing to me was that the two middle ones I suspect came from the same source and they look like they were remarked by the same vendor, yet, at least by power usage, one is CMOS and the other isn't. I guess they just dump massive batches of "whatever 6502-type things" into their remarking line and mark them all the same, even if they're possibly better than what they're remarking them as.
BigDumbDinosaur wrote:
Ergo any Rockwell 65C02 with a date code later than 1999 IS A FAKE.
Or at least re-marked, I'll believe. But there's no way an NMOS device pulls only 3.7 mA, as far as I know, so that third processor down, with a 1040 date code, is some sort of CMOS 6502. The lottery is subtle!
Quote:
It completely baffles me why folks insist on purchasing 65xx MPUs from eBay. The excuse about price doesn't wash, as the genuine article is worth more than the one or two dollars being charged....
Well, no, it's
not. (Or, at least, is only
sometimes worth more.) An article is worth what someone's willing to pay for it given full knowledge of what it is. And for my playing around a 6502 of any kind is worth about $2, whether it's an old 1 MHz NMOS CPU or a brand-spanking-new 14 MHz W65C02. Either one is fine for the little projects I build (or at least am currently building or anticipate building this year).
That said, it is sad that one does have to understand that parts get remarked or have a bad experience like Nogard did above. But that's really just a part of building hardware, it seems to me. There's a reason that system vendors carefully qualify their vendors and the parts they receive, even when not buying from cheap and dodgy distributors.