Please do NOT contact www.icomp.de for support. They only sell the housing for the EasyFlash, and are not affiliated in any way with our hardware.
Please have a look here. If you have questions about the EasyFlash, ask here.
This is the easiest way to build up your EasyFlash. Please stick to this guide to avoid problems.
Click a picture to see a bigger version.
If you are unsure about something, better ask or have a second look on a picture.
The schematic is not needed to build the EasyFlash hardware. Nevertheless, if you are interested, have a look here: EasyFlash schematic (PDF-File, 62 kB).
Unpack all parts carefully. Sorting them makes the building process much easier:
For a complete EasyFlash, you will need:
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Bend all resistors. The legs should have 10 mm space. Do not mix them up - there are two 10k and one 1k5 resistor! |
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Cut all parts from their paper-holders. Try to cut as near to the paper as possible to have long legs on all parts. Do NOT try to pull the parts out of the paper. The adhesive used is VERY sticky. This WILL destroy the parts. The cut-off legs are more than long enough. |
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Between the two PLCC sockets, you will be able to see a thick line on the silkscreen. Please solder the wire link here. |
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Solder the single 1k5 resistor in at position R2. |
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Solder the two 10k resistors in at position R1 and R3. |
Press the switch on the board with one finger while soldering. It should sit directly on the board.
If you plan to use the EasyFlash without a housing, it is recommended to fixate the switch with hot glue. Be careful though, so that you do only fixate the housing of the switch to the board and not the switch itself.
Fill the holes completely. This will ensure good electrical contact and hold the key in place.
The longer leg of the LED has to point to the name "LED1" on the silkscreen. Placing the LED in the wrong way, will not harm your computer, but it will not let it light up either.
Do not place the LED directly on the board, have 11 mm place between the board and the LED corpus. This will let the LED stick out of the housing instead of forcing you to look into a hole at the housing.
Use a multimeter or an ohmmeter to measure between VCC and GND (e.g. top left and lower right corner of the biggest DIL socket).
If the boot-switch is at the position near the reset-key, you should measure a very high impedance (some megaohms, eventually "OL" or "1.." on some multimeters).
Now put the boot-switch in the position near the LED. You should measure between 9500 and 10500 ohms now.
If the values you measured are different from the values mentioned here, you have made a mistake. Re-check all parts and look for short-circuits on solder side. Ask in the forum if you need help.
Please, keep the probes of the multimeter for a few seconds on the measuring points, until the value on your multimeter does not change anymore.
DO NOT PLUG THE EASYFLASH INTO YOUR COMPUTER IF THE MEASURED VALUES ARE NOT CORRECT.
The big RAM IC is easy to place, for all others the following table will tell you the positions of each IC:
| IC # | IC type |
|---|---|
| U1 | 74HCT00 |
| U2 | 74HCT02 |
| U5 | 74HCT175 |
| U6 | 74HCT174 |
| U7 | 74HCT74 |
To let the C64 start with empty or badly programmed flash chips, move the boot switch to the position near the reset key (NOT the position seen in the pictures).
Have a look at Skoes EasyFlash-Homepage [>] to get EasyProg, the tool you will need to program the flash memory.
Now copy it onto a SD2IEC or similar, with some CRT images, so that you can test your new hardware.
Remember copying the CRT images to the SD2IEC/floppy/...!
Skoes Homepage does not give you CRT images, but it might be interesting to have a look into the compatibility list [>].
The C64 expansion port is, as you might know, directly connected to the SID, the CPU, the VIC-II and the PLA, which is everything that is important and expensive in a C64. If you have ANY doubt that there is a mistake in the board or think that something went wrong while building it, DO NOT PLUG IT IN. AN ERROUNEUS BOARD WILL DESTROY ESSENTIAL PARTS OF YOUR COMPUTER.
While using the EasyFlash,
If possible, get a housing for that cartridge. It is way cheaper then having to repair the C64.
Have a critical look at your work before plugging it in. Be sure that everything is ok. Done? Ok, then you are ready for...
Please have a look at Skoes EasyFlash-Homepage [>] to learn how to use the EasyFlash.
After flashing, move the boot-switch and press the reset key.
That's it. We wish you a lot of fun with this cartridge!
Translated by damaltor