Reply 20 of 22, by Miphee
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darry wrote on 2022-11-01, 18:36:Dumping that EPROM and looking for text strings might provide a hint .
Good idea, did just that. No idea how to read that .bin file though.
darry wrote on 2022-11-01, 18:36:Dumping that EPROM and looking for text strings might provide a hint .
Good idea, did just that. No idea how to read that .bin file though.
Miphee wrote on 2022-11-01, 18:00:Hi, could you identify this logo? It's on a generic-looking hercules card. No FCC, nothing on the back. Thanks.
This card - http://vgamuseum.info/images/palcal/yamaha/40 … 63-f_top_hq.jpg - has the same sticker, and the FCC ID points to "Tiva Microcomputer Corporation (TMC)".
The EPROM is most likely the character generator.
Kiełbasa smakuje najlepiej, gdy przysmażysz ją laserem!
Grzyb wrote on 2022-11-01, 21:21:This card - http://vgamuseum.info/images/palcal/yamaha/40 … 63-f_top_hq.jpg - has the same sticker, and the FCC ID points to "Tiva Microcomputer Corporation (TMC)".
The EPROM is most likely the character generator.
Thank you so much for your help!
I peeled the WI sticker from the other card's chip and it's SCX6212RUL/V4, the card appears on VCFED and a spanish webshop too, but can't read the model number (YU-200B, YU-700B or something). Clones must have been sold under many names. Maybe the logo belonged to the shop that sold the card and not the manufacturer.