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 Post subject: Is This a BGA 152 Chip
PostPosted: October 27th, 2017, 15:38 
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Just got a Lexar CF Card in with these chips. I cannot find the specs from the number on the chip. Are they BGA 152?


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 Post subject: Re: Is This a BGA 152 Chip
PostPosted: October 27th, 2017, 15:47 
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It's BGA100 chip - there are sockets or direct BGA boards for this. You can look in VNR standard set ;)
If you need to solder then page 18 on ONFI - http://www.onfi.org/~/media/onfi/specs/ ... .pdf?la=en

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 Post subject: Re: Is This a BGA 152 Chip
PostPosted: October 27th, 2017, 15:53 
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Bolo wrote:
It's BGA100 chip - there are sockets or direct BGA boards for this. You can look in VNR standard set ;)
If you need to solder then page 18 on ONFI - http://www.onfi.org/~/media/onfi/specs/ ... .pdf?la=en

Many thanks. I do have VNR set so we should be good. Thanks again.

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 Post subject: Re: Is This a BGA 152 Chip
PostPosted: October 27th, 2017, 16:16 
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Hhhmmm. None of the 4 chips will ID. I think its the first time I have had BGA100 chips in, so it may be a bad socket :(. I will send it back to VNR for testing.

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 Post subject: Re: Is This a BGA 152 Chip
PostPosted: October 27th, 2017, 16:42 
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Dunno if it’s related but I had a similar problem a long time ago with the BGA-100 socket for SC I bought from Sunny.

Would work with some chips but not others, but credit to Sunny he got me to make a mod to wiring underneath the socket (cut a track and wire in a new connection as I remember) and it worked fine and has been doing ever since :-)

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 Post subject: Re: Is This a BGA 152 Chip
PostPosted: October 27th, 2017, 16:51 
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Hello DDrecovery ,
While learning flash these days i have come to know that there are many ways to read most chips and specific ways to read some chips .I do not agree that the socket would be bad or all of your 4 chips are fried ,Its impossible that all 4 are .Definately Not BGA 152 That Beast Has a Different Pinout All Together .What All Tools you Have ? .

@ Bolo,
When Are The Monolith Sd Card Adapters Coming Out Boss ,I Am Waiting For Those

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 Post subject: Re: Is This a BGA 152 Chip
PostPosted: October 27th, 2017, 17:19 
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I tested a few other BGA100 chips I had and none of them would ID. I have just reballed the first chip from the case and soldered it to the PC3000 Flash BGA100 module and it has ID'd and is now reading. Just unlucky to have a bad socket I guess. The service from VNR is normally pretty good, so I will send it back for testing. They may learn from what has gone wrong with this one. Thanks for the replies.

As I have to reball and mount each chip. Is there a way to correct ECC in PC3000 Flash chip by chip? I know it defaults to wanting the next chip read, but can this be stopped to complete ECC correction before reading the next chip?

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 Post subject: Re: Is This a BGA 152 Chip
PostPosted: October 27th, 2017, 17:28 
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you can find the dumps in the PC3K folder hierarchy and import them to VNR
or just an idea, I don't have PC3K but may work.. pretend to PC3K that it is 4 separate cases to complete ECC in each chip before reading next one


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 Post subject: Re: Is This a BGA 152 Chip
PostPosted: October 27th, 2017, 17:34 
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HaQue wrote:
or just an idea, I don't have PC3K but may work.. pretend to PC3K that it is 4 separate cases to complete ECC in each chip before reading next one

Might just work you know :-)

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 Post subject: Re: Is This a BGA 152 Chip
PostPosted: October 28th, 2017, 6:57 
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ddrecovery wrote:
I tested a few other BGA100 chips I had and none of them would ID. I have just reballed the first chip from the case and soldered it to the PC3000 Flash BGA100 module and it has ID'd and is now reading. Just unlucky to have a bad socket I guess. The service from VNR is normally pretty good, so I will send it back for testing. They may learn from what has gone wrong with this one. Thanks for the replies.

As I have to reball and mount each chip. Is there a way to correct ECC in PC3000 Flash chip by chip? I know it defaults to wanting the next chip read, but can this be stopped to complete ECC correction before reading the next chip?


Well,
This Depends on The ZIFF Socket Used by developer .In some the ic has to have balls and then it will read and in some you have to make sure you Remove The Solder on The Pads ,I have a BGA 132 Case Going On Right Now And i Made 3 videos on it on my facebook .Do check em out - > http://www.chandigarhdatarecovery.com/2 ... media.html .I was playing around with a irda machine for BGA removal today And i have a case today with SM2236G With 4 BGA 132 Each With 32 GB And 4 Planes Damn :lol:

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 Post subject: Re: Is This a BGA 152 Chip
PostPosted: October 28th, 2017, 9:14 
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Hi,
Here images for you for BGA 152 And BGA 132

1 : Image


2 : Image

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 Post subject: Re: Is This a BGA 152 Chip
PostPosted: October 28th, 2017, 9:39 
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@ddrecovery: you can freely read by PC3K or SC and then import to VNR (just open as Physical Image)

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 Post subject: Re: Is This a BGA 152 Chip
PostPosted: October 28th, 2017, 10:37 
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Bolo wrote:
@ddrecovery: you can freely read by PC3K or SC and then import to VNR (just open as Physical Image)


Bolo,
You missed my question i had asked you when do we expect those monolith sd adapters ,micro sd are already there i know

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 Post subject: Re: Is This a BGA 152 Chip
PostPosted: October 28th, 2017, 11:40 
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Bolo wrote:
@ddrecovery: you can freely read by PC3K or SC and then import to VNR (just open as Physical Image)

Yep, I have done that before both to and from PC3K. But as I am reading the chips on PC3K I may as well carry on there :-)

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 Post subject: Re: Is This a BGA 152 Chip
PostPosted: October 28th, 2017, 16:46 
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@Amarbir: very...very soon ;)

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 Post subject: Re: Is This a BGA 152 Chip
PostPosted: October 30th, 2017, 2:14 
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Bolo wrote:
@Amarbir: very...very soon ;)



Well,
i am super excited :D

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 Post subject: Re: Is This a BGA 152 Chip
PostPosted: December 17th, 2017, 15:34 
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The chip is Micron MT29F256G08AUCABK4-10:A, where 'K4' is the package code.
Micron's use 'H1', 'H2, and 'H3' codes for their BGA100 depending on the package thickness, but I can't find any information about 'K4' code.

I suspect that this chip may have an non-standard package or pinout.
BTW, they have a very similar chip with a standard package code: "MT29F256G08AUCABH3-10:A".


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 Post subject: Re: Is This a BGA 152 Chip
PostPosted: December 18th, 2017, 16:07 
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@jcur: Check ONFI and make MAP pinout of your memory - you will see if it's match or not

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 Post subject: Re: Is This a BGA 152 Chip
PostPosted: December 19th, 2017, 8:04 
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see this maybe help


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 Post subject: Re: Is This a BGA 152 Chip
PostPosted: December 19th, 2017, 14:17 
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FWIW ...

NAND Flash Component Part Numbering Guide - SpecTek:
https://www.spectek.com/pdfs/SpecTek_pns_Flash.pdf

    H1 = 100-ball VBGA, 12 x 18 x 1.0
    H2 = 100-ball TBGA, 12 x 18 x 1.2
    H3 = 100-ball LBGA, 12 x 18 x 1.4
    K3 = 100-ball VLGA 12 x 18 x 0.9
    K4 = 100-ball TLGA, 12 x 18 x 1.1

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