Vintage Pic 16C73


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  1. #1
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    Default Vintage Pic 16C73

    Hi Guys

    Don’t tell me you don’t think it’s beautiful!



    I got a couple on eBay because... vintage collector... but then found of course the PicKit II doesn’t support them.
    I haven’t looked hard, but suspect they need a high voltage programming pin for EPROM.
    The PicKit II does however retrieve a device ID, which suggests they are ok.

    I’m not even certain PBP supports these, but if not, I’m sure a program disassembly for a close relative could be easily ported for it.

    Does anyone remember these, and a homebrew programmer the supported them? PicALL? The earlier official programmers like Picstart were not cheap!

    Incidentally, I have at least one SP0256 on the way, if anyone remembers that. It’s a speech synthesiser which was well covered in some projects
    in my first PicBASIC programming book.. but I never did own one.

  2. #2
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    Default Re: Vintage Pic 16C73

    When I bought my PICStart+ sometime around -96 I think it came with a couple of -JW parts, one of them being a PIC14000 series (IIRC) which was called a mixed signal controller since it had had some analog peripherals inside (!).

    I believe I still have the PICStart+ and the chips that came with it somewhere....

  3. #3
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    Default Re: Vintage Pic 16C73

    Here they are, still in the package they came in. A datecode of -97 on one of them means I probably didn't get the PICStart+ in -96...

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    I've never actually used these. My first real close contact with a PIC was with the venerable 16C84 which I believe also was included (1pcs). At the time I only used the programmer to "burn" exisiting code into the chips (pirated smartcards for satelite TV distribution) and it was only a few years later that I started to use PBC and then PBP after a short period with the classic BS1 and BS2.

  4. #4
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    Default Re: Vintage Pic 16C73

    You naughty Henrik!

    Yeah, I started with a Pikstart+ and those widowed chips along with an UV lamp to erase them. 10-15 endless minutes until reprogramming! Yikes!

    Ioannis

  5. #5
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    Default Re: Vintage Pic 16C73

    Was the sat access control Irdeto 1? because I wrote PMK and signature decrypt for that on pic (in asm though).

  6. #6
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    Default Re: Vintage Pic 16C73

    Honestly, I have NO idea. I knew nothing about how it worked (still don't really). I barely knew what a PIC was or how you actually wrote a program for it.
    I had done a tiny bit of 8051 stuff in school but never quite grasped the whole programming mindset (still don't really...). All I did was etch some boards and programmed some PICs with .hex files (there was two 16C84 on each card) from the World Wide Web.

    I remember that when they changed keys (or whatever) I got a bunch of cards back which needed new firmware loaded into them. It really didn't last long (might have done 15-20 cards tops) before it got to a point where they could change keys two or three times in a week and always right before a football game or in the middle of a movie "premiere" and everyone , including me and my "partner in crime" lost interest in it.

  7. #7
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    Default Re: Vintage Pic 16C73

    We got a step ahead of that, and could process encrypted master key updates here... I kind of assume it’s the same system,
    because it was used widely around the world. Australia, Germany, and Sth Africa I know for sure.

  8. #8
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    Default Re: Vintage Pic 16C73

    Yes, later generation, more capable, cards updated automatically or perhaps the user could do it with the remote or something. But the ones we we etched at home and put C84's on was not that "advanced".
    Like I said, at the time I had absolutely NO idea how the thing worked or what it ACTUALLY did (the card and PICs on it). And when it comes to crypto-stuff I'm still very much ignorant :-)

  9. #9
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    Default Re: Vintage Pic 16C73

    Latest chips arrived

    SP0256 variants. The first from General Instruments, and then after Microchip acquired them.
    These are a speech synthesiser that appeared in some toys, and also in a PicBASIC project book I still have.


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