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#31
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IBM T22 CMOS Battery Connector
On Wednesday, May 29, 2013 6:56:54 PM UTC-4, Patrick wrote:
Heres a few pictures that might be usefull and that you may not have seen! (Like the one where the 'mask' is used to protect rest of the PCB (like doing medical-surgery )) . The problem now is that it is the 14 pin chip. I'm not sure what size wire I should be using, but I have tons of 18 and 20 gauge, which are obviously too large. Not to mention my lately unsteady hands. (If small wire is not sold at Radio Shack I have a problem). On the forum where it is discussed, the best idea seemed to be to connect the Gnd wire to the VGA screw, and then to solder needles to the other two wires from the interface and use them as probes to the IC until the program has finished. (assistant needed to press 'Enter' etc.,) I didn't see what pics you were referring to, but the instructions on how to do this assume that you know what is and how to use a command prompt, so I have to figure that out and following these instructions: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "Fire up a command promt(Start-run type cmd) and navigate to the folder where you installed R24RF08 v2.0b. Type in (don’t hit Enter): r24rf08 dump.bin" -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- What doesn't make sense is #4 of the following instructions: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1) Turn on your ThinkPad with all the wiring you just soldered. 2) Press F1 during the startup to enter the BIOS. 3) Wait untill all activity stops, blinking HDD leds and such. 4) Connect the ATMEL Chip reader. GND first then the SDA and SCL. 5) Now go to your spare PC and Hit enter on the command prompt. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- If everthing is already connected to the serial port, which is connected to your spare pc, then what is #4 for? (I'm certain I'll hit another roadblock after this). Thanks. Darren Harris Staten Island, New York. |
#33
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IBM T22 CMOS Battery Connector
wrote on 04/08/2013 :
On Wednesday, May 29, 2013 6:56:54 PM UTC-4, Patrick wrote: Heres a few pictures that might be usefull and that you may not have seen! (Like the one where the 'mask' is used to protect rest of the PCB (like doing medical-surgery )) . The problem now is that it is the 14 pin chip. I'm not sure what size wire I should be using, but I have tons of 18 and 20 gauge, which are obviously too large. Not to mention my lately unsteady hands. (If small wire is not sold at Radio Shack I have a problem). On the forum where it is discussed, the best idea seemed to be to connect the Gnd wire to the VGA screw, and then to solder needles to the other two wires from the interface and use them as probes to the IC until the program has finished. (assistant needed to press 'Enter' etc.,) I didn't see what pics you were referring to, but the instructions on how to do this assume that you know what is and how to use a command prompt, so I have to figure that out and following these instructions: Sorry, I may have given wrong link! Here are the pictures alltogether; https://www.dropbox.com/sh/9jgu35n7iwvnliw/jPK6H0HjAF Here are the pictures individually; Picture showing wires connected to 24RF08 https://www.dropbox.com/s/3r5mud3ka0v9rw6/24RF08.jpg Picture of the 14pin version of the 24RF08 https://www.dropbox.com/s/reolj65ix7..._14_pinOUT.jpg Picture of 8pin version of 24RF08 https://www.dropbox.com/s/cyt4kk2k8s...F08_eeprom.jpg Another picture of 14pin 24RF08 https://www.dropbox.com/s/gwh70cn5pb...rf08closea.jpg Diagram of both versions (15 and 8 pin) https://www.dropbox.com/s/zskvym9ohfibxem/EEPROMpic.gif Picture of the MoBo being Masked with insulating-tape but leaving the 24RF08 clear https://www.dropbox.com/s/5w59st80fb...esCAG3IWR0.jpg Picture of (somepersons) finished connector https://www.dropbox.com/s/d5xwstvw9x...img0201ra5.jpg Picture of the T22 with (3) wires soldered to the 24RF08 https://www.dropbox.com/s/0427j78jtxnm8l3/T22_case.jpg -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "Fire up a command promt(Start-run type cmd) and navigate to the folder where you installed R24RF08 v2.0b. Type in (don’t hit Enter): r24rf08 dump.bin" -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- What doesn't make sense is #4 of the following instructions: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1) Turn on your ThinkPad with all the wiring you just soldered. 2) Press F1 during the startup to enter the BIOS. 3) Wait untill all activity stops, blinking HDD leds and such. 4) Connect the ATMEL Chip reader. GND first then the SDA and SCL. 5) Now go to your spare PC and Hit enter on the command prompt. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- If everthing is already connected to the serial port, which is connected to your spare pc, then what is #4 for? (I'm certain I'll hit another roadblock after this). As far as I understand, if the T22 and the work PC are connected before both machines are Booted, then they may interfere with each other. Thus you would connected the wires after both are booted and the PC is ready to run the Program (GND can be be preconnected though). See as in the pictures, you have wires from the T22 just dangling and ready to be connected to the Alligator-clips that are on the 'Interface' plugged into the (Service) PC. Thanks. Darren Harris Staten Island, New York. |
#34
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IBM T22 CMOS Battery Connector
On Sunday, August 4, 2013 3:36:40 PM UTC-4, Paul wrote:
wrote: On Wednesday, May 29, 2013 6:56:54 PM UTC-4, Patrick wrote: Heres a few pictures that might be usefull and that you may not have seen! (Like the one where the 'mask' is used to protect rest of the PCB (like doing medical-surgery )) . The problem now is that it is the 14 pin chip. I'm not sure what size wire I should be using, but I have tons of 18 and 20 gauge, which are obviously too large. Not to mention my lately unsteady hands. (If small wire is not sold at Radio Shack I have a problem). On the forum where it is discussed, the best idea seemed to be to connect the Gnd wire to the VGA screw, and then to solder needles to the other two wires from the interface and use them as probes to the IC until the program has finished. (assistant needed to press 'Enter' etc.,) I didn't see what pics you were referring to, but the instructions on how to do this assume that you know what is and how to use a command prompt, so I have to figure that out and following these instructions: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "Fire up a command promt(Start-run type cmd) and navigate to the folder where you installed R24RF08 v2.0b. Type in (don’t hit Enter): r24rf08 dump.bin" -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- What doesn't make sense is #4 of the following instructions: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1) Turn on your ThinkPad with all the wiring you just soldered. 2) Press F1 during the startup to enter the BIOS. 3) Wait untill all activity stops, blinking HDD leds and such. 4) Connect the ATMEL Chip reader. GND first then the SDA and SCL. 5) Now go to your spare PC and Hit enter on the command prompt. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- If everthing is already connected to the serial port, which is connected to your spare pc, then what is #4 for? (I'm certain I'll hit another roadblock after this). Thanks. Darren Harris Staten Island, New York. This step on the one PC (capturing PC), prepares a command, but doesn't start executing or anything. It would not start executing, until you hit Enter. You've been asked, *not* to press Enter yet. Type in (don’t hit Enter): r24rf08 dump.bin That is the program which is going to record some serial information into dump.bin. (I can see a reference to 24RF08 here, a part I'm not familiar with... http://www.thinkwiki.org/wiki/AT24RF08 ) The other instructions 1) to 5), prepare the target machine. Connecting the ATMEL Chip reader, now your target SDA (data) and SDL (clock) are connected to something. Going back to the recording machine, where the "r24rf08 dump.bin" is sitting in the command prompt, you haven't hit "Enter" yet. When you hit Enter, the program you're about to run, assumes the ATMEL Chip reader is already connected, and it's going to run SDA and SCL until some device is dumped. Apparently "r24rf08 dump.bin" collects data immediately, which is why you don't hit Enter until everything is wired up (and the target machine is in a known state, quiet in the BIOS). Paul Ok, after some research I found that all I have to do is put "cmd" in "Run" and a command prompt box pops up. I'll ust (try to) make up the harness and then plug it into the spare pc *after* boot-up. (Back to the harness). Thanks. Darren Harris Staten Island, New York. |
#35
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IBM T22 CMOS Battery Connector
On Monday, August 5, 2013 3:46:27 PM UTC-4, Patrick wrote:
wrote on 04/08/2013 : On Wednesday, May 29, 2013 6:56:54 PM UTC-4, Patrick wrote: Heres a few pictures that might be usefull and that you may not have seen! (Like the one where the 'mask' is used to protect rest of the PCB (like doing medical-surgery )) . The problem now is that it is the 14 pin chip. I'm not sure what size wire I should be using, but I have tons of 18 and 20 gauge, which are obviously too large. Not to mention my lately unsteady hands. (If small wire is not sold at Radio Shack I have a problem). On the forum where it is discussed, the best idea seemed to be to connect the Gnd wire to the VGA screw, and then to solder needles to the other two wires from the interface and use them as probes to the IC until the program has finished. (assistant needed to press 'Enter' etc.,) I didn't see what pics you were referring to, but the instructions on how to do this assume that you know what is and how to use a command prompt, so I have to figure that out and following these instructions: Sorry, I may have given wrong link! Here are the pictures alltogether; https://www.dropbox.com/sh/9jgu35n7iwvnliw/jPK6H0HjAF Here are the pictures individually; Picture showing wires connected to 24RF08 https://www.dropbox.com/s/3r5mud3ka0v9rw6/24RF08.jpg Picture of the 14pin version of the 24RF08 https://www.dropbox.com/s/reolj65ix7..._14_pinOUT.jpg Picture of 8pin version of 24RF08 https://www.dropbox.com/s/cyt4kk2k8s...F08_eeprom.jpg Another picture of 14pin 24RF08 https://www.dropbox.com/s/gwh70cn5pb...rf08closea.jpg Diagram of both versions (15 and 8 pin) https://www.dropbox.com/s/zskvym9ohfibxem/EEPROMpic.gif Picture of the MoBo being Masked with insulating-tape but leaving the 24RF08 clear https://www.dropbox.com/s/5w59st80fb...esCAG3IWR0.jpg Picture of (somepersons) finished connector https://www.dropbox.com/s/d5xwstvw9x...img0201ra5.jpg Picture of the T22 with (3) wires soldered to the 24RF08 https://www.dropbox.com/s/0427j78jtxnm8l3/T22_case.jpg -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "Fire up a command promt(Start-run type cmd) and navigate to the folder where you installed R24RF08 v2.0b. Type in (don’t hit Enter): r24rf08 dump.bin" -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- What doesn't make sense is #4 of the following instructions: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1) Turn on your ThinkPad with all the wiring you just soldered. 2) Press F1 during the startup to enter the BIOS. 3) Wait untill all activity stops, blinking HDD leds and such. 4) Connect the ATMEL Chip reader. GND first then the SDA and SCL. 5) Now go to your spare PC and Hit enter on the command prompt. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- If everthing is already connected to the serial port, which is connected to your spare pc, then what is #4 for? (I'm certain I'll hit another roadblock after this). As far as I understand, if the T22 and the work PC are connected before both machines are Booted, then they may interfere with each other. Thus you would connected the wires after both are booted and the PC is ready to run the Program (GND can be be preconnected though). See as in the pictures, you have wires from the T22 just dangling and ready to be connected to the Alligator-clips that are on the 'Interface' plugged into the (Service) PC. I spent hours trying to solder the leads to that chip. (And I have relatively steady hands). I'll now have to get some solder off that is bridging a couple of the legs, and then try again. Though I may have already toasted the chip because the iron brushed over it a couple times. (That needle idea just doesn't work). And now after seeing those pic links you posted I realized that I've been attempting to solder the leads to the incorrect legs anyway. (sigh). Thanks. Darren Harris Staten Island, New York. |
#36
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IBM T22 CMOS Battery Connector
On Tue, 6 Aug 2013 15:30:26 -0700 (PDT),
wrote: I'll now have to get some solder off that is bridging a couple of the legs, and then try again. Though I may have already toasted the chip because the iron brushed over it a couple times. (That needle idea just doesn't work). - Get an extra set of 4 tips for free shipping (got the soldersucker, shrinkwrap, flux, tip rejuvinator paste, solder, 3rd-hands, etc. - best prices from Singapore). I've done minature 9- and 6- pin toggle switches and the tip's adaptable and controllable - reasonably, there's no actual temp sensor in the tip for something a quarter the price of a variable temp soldering station. Very fine and close to whatever you're doing, I'd imagine - I had to use magnifiers and lights to see the connects. It's the very fine tip I mostly use among 4 provided. I've $6 irons for beaters and up to a plumber's grade iron for big stuff. http://www.amazon.com/Soldering-Stat.../dp/B0029N70WM |
#37
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IBM T22 CMOS Battery Connector
On Wed, 07 Aug 2013 13:10:59 -0400, Flasherly
wrote: Slew of bad reviews more of recent (bought mine awhile ago and it's older) - bad Chinese assembly QC, localised to the wand with the wires too long and abutting the heater element, where they shouldn't. Evidently causes the unit to short and burns it out. Took apart my wand and don't see the wiring issues, so hard to describle what the fix is. Works great, as also follows many other reviews. Anyway, it required a two special screws to get the wand apart. Luckily I had the right screw tip in a $3 Chinese cellphone disassembly kit: HOSHE HS-6036A (found it on Ebay's Singapore market). |
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