JuanGg wrote:
I purchased five of this ICs off eBay. This is what arrived: Manufacturing date 2019. On the top, Mexico, on the bottom, Taiwan and a handful of scratches.
I wouldn't mind much if they worked. I hooked them up on a breadboard, providing power (5V) and tying reset, IRQ, NMI and SO high by 1K resistors. 1 Mhz clock courtesy of my function generator and later by a crystal. Data bus set to EA by 1k resistors. Power consumption is about 30 mA...
It's been some time, and the discussion has gone elsewhere, but I thought this may be interesting.
Cleaning up yesterday I came across these chips and thought I'd have a go at decapping one. No acids or heatgun around, so I just sanded the epoxy off to reveal the (obviously damaged) die.
The best photo I could take with a regular camera is the first one attached. The second one is an "artistic interpretation" of the die, product of a toy microscope, a camera looking down the eyepiece, and my expertise in MS Paint. Of course, I was pushing the ic around with a mechanical pencil.
I couldn't find any markings or numbers, most likely scratched away (by me) if there were any, but I'd say it looks like a microcontroller, with built in ROM, as Martin A pointed out:
Martin A wrote:
I check some of the 40 pin chips I've acquired over the years, those reverse markings look a lot like those on an Atmel AT89C51 micro controller.
In fact, it looks similar to this 87C51 die:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a9/Intel_87C51FC_die.JPGCouldn't find a die photo of an 89C51.
Only thing I know for sure is that there's no way this is (was) a 6502. Also 6502's die should be square... The other 4 I got could very well be completely random parts as well.
Juan