Trying it out on real hardware?
Started by nmoog, Jun 23 2006 2:02 AM
19 replies to this topic
#1
Posted Fri Jun 23, 2006 2:02 AM
Hey guys,
I've had a few weeks of 2600 programming now, and I'm having a ball. Now that I've got a mini "game" happening, I can't help but wonder about getting stuff working on my real hardware. I've been searching through the programming sections here, and the homebrew forum and I'm trying to figure out the best options for both testing while developing, and creating carts for a real 2600.
I've read about the "supercharger" and "Cuttle cart" which look like they would be great for developing with - but I am guessing that these are no longer available for purchase? Are there any other options?
I'd also like to get an eeprom writer (I've been wanting to mess around with one for ages anyway) but am unsure of what is required, or exactly how this works, to create carts that I can give to friends etc. Various snippets of information I've found on the subject seem to be out dated or contradictory. What's the latest, cheapest, and or best equipment I'd need to start looking for?
Thanks!
I've had a few weeks of 2600 programming now, and I'm having a ball. Now that I've got a mini "game" happening, I can't help but wonder about getting stuff working on my real hardware. I've been searching through the programming sections here, and the homebrew forum and I'm trying to figure out the best options for both testing while developing, and creating carts for a real 2600.
I've read about the "supercharger" and "Cuttle cart" which look like they would be great for developing with - but I am guessing that these are no longer available for purchase? Are there any other options?
I'd also like to get an eeprom writer (I've been wanting to mess around with one for ages anyway) but am unsure of what is required, or exactly how this works, to create carts that I can give to friends etc. Various snippets of information I've found on the subject seem to be out dated or contradictory. What's the latest, cheapest, and or best equipment I'd need to start looking for?
Thanks!
#2
Posted Fri Jun 23, 2006 6:43 AM
nmoog, on Fri Jun 23, 2006 4:02 AM, said:
Hey guys,
I've had a few weeks of 2600 programming now, and I'm having a ball. Now that I've got a mini "game" happening, I can't help but wonder about getting stuff working on my real hardware. I've been searching through the programming sections here, and the homebrew forum and I'm trying to figure out the best options for both testing while developing, and creating carts for a real 2600.
I've read about the "supercharger" and "Cuttle cart" which look like they would be great for developing with - but I am guessing that these are no longer available for purchase? Are there any other options?
I'd also like to get an eeprom writer (I've been wanting to mess around with one for ages anyway) but am unsure of what is required, or exactly how this works, to create carts that I can give to friends etc. Various snippets of information I've found on the subject seem to be out dated or contradictory. What's the latest, cheapest, and or best equipment I'd need to start looking for?
Thanks!
I've had a few weeks of 2600 programming now, and I'm having a ball. Now that I've got a mini "game" happening, I can't help but wonder about getting stuff working on my real hardware. I've been searching through the programming sections here, and the homebrew forum and I'm trying to figure out the best options for both testing while developing, and creating carts for a real 2600.
I've read about the "supercharger" and "Cuttle cart" which look like they would be great for developing with - but I am guessing that these are no longer available for purchase? Are there any other options?
I'd also like to get an eeprom writer (I've been wanting to mess around with one for ages anyway) but am unsure of what is required, or exactly how this works, to create carts that I can give to friends etc. Various snippets of information I've found on the subject seem to be out dated or contradictory. What's the latest, cheapest, and or best equipment I'd need to start looking for?
Thanks!
Michael Rideout
#3
Posted Fri Jun 23, 2006 8:45 AM
You can use a Supercharger for for up to 4K games(plus then you can also play the supercharger games on your Atari!)
Supercharger Development Files
Supercharger Development Files
Edited by SpiceWare, Fri Jun 23, 2006 8:45 AM.
#4
Posted Fri Jun 23, 2006 8:57 AM
If you do buy a device programmer, you can buy a single, socketed 4K board from our store, and then program 4K EPROMs to test your game. This is one of the less expensive routes to go if you don't want to buy a flash-based device (such as a Cuttle Cart 2 or Krokodile Cart, as neither of these are available for purchase new right now) and you plan on purchasing a programmer anyway. You'd also an EPROM eraser, which uses UltraViolet light to erase the contents of the EPROM.
The 4K board we sell with a socket is here (it's $7.00):
http://www.atariage.com/store/index.php?ma...products_id=217
All you'd need then are EPROMs, the device programmer and ultimately an eraser.
..Al
The 4K board we sell with a socket is here (it's $7.00):
http://www.atariage.com/store/index.php?ma...products_id=217
All you'd need then are EPROMs, the device programmer and ultimately an eraser.
..Al
#5
Posted Fri Jun 23, 2006 9:09 AM
Superchargers show up regularily on eBay for ~$20.
#6
Posted Fri Jun 23, 2006 9:25 AM
Thomas Jentzsch, on Fri Jun 23, 2006 10:09 AM, said:
Superchargers show up regularily on eBay for ~$20.
..Al
#7
Posted Fri Jun 23, 2006 5:00 PM
I'm in line (hopefully) for the Krokodile Cart - that looks awesome!
For a device programmer - are there any suggested models etc? Any recommendations?
Also I've read on the forum here about people re-using cartridges - is this just for the outer shell? Or do you pull out the board chip and solder in your game chip? (if i were to make some games for friends)
And, (last one!), I've read about people talking about soldering a capacitor on to the cartridge. What is that about?!
Thanks!
For a device programmer - are there any suggested models etc? Any recommendations?
Also I've read on the forum here about people re-using cartridges - is this just for the outer shell? Or do you pull out the board chip and solder in your game chip? (if i were to make some games for friends)
And, (last one!), I've read about people talking about soldering a capacitor on to the cartridge. What is that about?!
Thanks!
#8
Posted Sun Jun 25, 2006 9:38 PM
Ok, disregard all those questions, they've been discussed a million times around here. Sorry about that.
I'm thinking of getting one of those cheap-n-nastly looking Willem programmers (http://tinyurl.com/p6468 : ebay link), because not too many eprom programmers turn up on ebay Australia. From what I've read, the Willem dual-power model will burn 2 and 4k chips that you can get from the AA store. As long as you use an adapter for power.
Hopefully.
I'm thinking of getting one of those cheap-n-nastly looking Willem programmers (http://tinyurl.com/p6468 : ebay link), because not too many eprom programmers turn up on ebay Australia. From what I've read, the Willem dual-power model will burn 2 and 4k chips that you can get from the AA store. As long as you use an adapter for power.
Hopefully.
#9
Posted Mon Jun 26, 2006 6:52 AM
http://cgi.ebay.com.au/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?Vi...Y_BIN_Stores_IT
I don't know how to link to ebay stuff but I like this one. Is there some reason the one you posted is better?
I don't know how to link to ebay stuff but I like this one. Is there some reason the one you posted is better?
#10
Posted Mon Jun 26, 2006 7:50 AM
MausBoy, on Mon Jun 26, 2006 1:52 PM, said:
http://cgi.ebay.com.au/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?Vi...Y_BIN_Stores_IT
I don't know how to link to ebay stuff but I like this one. Is there some reason the one you posted is better?
I don't know how to link to ebay stuff but I like this one. Is there some reason the one you posted is better?
Personally I wouldn't buy any item that ships from Hong Kong and accepts Western Union payment. In this case, the seller has only been active for a few months and a lot of their feedback comes from private listings. Perhaps I am over-suspicious, but you can't be too careful.
Chris
#11
Posted Mon Jun 26, 2006 8:36 AM
nmoog's link is the same seller. Any alternative recommendations?
Edited by MausBoy, Mon Jun 26, 2006 8:39 AM.
#12
Posted Mon Jun 26, 2006 6:12 PM
I've been reading all the eprom posts here, and there is mixed reviews of Willem programmers in general - The specific criticisms seem to be that the "Willem Enhanced" programmer will not burn atari suitable chips (like 2732) because it is only USB powered but need more power to program them. The Dual Powered ones (like the ones we linked to on ebay) do write the chips (I believe!) if you use an external power adapter (again, I believe this is what is going on - the problem is that the Willem boards have a lot of other "adapters" to allow different chips to be used, and I'm not sure if people were talking about the power adapter, or a chip adapter that is necessary for atari eproms)
The second criticism is that if you wait around a bit you will find a similarly priced second hand programmer (like a BP Microsystems programmer) that is a lot more sturdy/professional/full featured.
Well there's my summary of the AtariAge Eprom Discussions
The second criticism is that if you wait around a bit you will find a similarly priced second hand programmer (like a BP Microsystems programmer) that is a lot more sturdy/professional/full featured.
Well there's my summary of the AtariAge Eprom Discussions
#13
Posted Thu Jun 29, 2006 12:32 PM
nmoog, on Mon Jun 26, 2006 7:12 PM, said:
I've been reading all the eprom posts here, and there is mixed reviews of Willem programmers in general - The specific criticisms seem to be that the "Willem Enhanced" programmer will not burn atari suitable chips (like 2732) because it is only USB powered but need more power to program them. The Dual Powered ones (like the ones we linked to on ebay) do write the chips (I believe!) if you use an external power adapter (again, I believe this is what is going on - the problem is that the Willem boards have a lot of other "adapters" to allow different chips to be used, and I'm not sure if people were talking about the power adapter, or a chip adapter that is necessary for atari eproms)
The second criticism is that if you wait around a bit you will find a similarly priced second hand programmer (like a BP Microsystems programmer) that is a lot more sturdy/professional/full featured.
Well there's my summary of the AtariAge Eprom Discussions
The second criticism is that if you wait around a bit you will find a similarly priced second hand programmer (like a BP Microsystems programmer) that is a lot more sturdy/professional/full featured.
Well there's my summary of the AtariAge Eprom Discussions
But anyway, Willems are really cheap but people seem to have tons of trouble with them, even the dual-power model. My personal analysis is that a good programmer will cost you $150-$300, and that will be for a parallel port model. A USB model will cost a couple of hundred more.
Used programmers on eBay are a real crapshoot. I'd research a programmer before bidding on it. Although I've seen some go for as low as $10, you may end up with something you can't use. It may be missing an interface card, docs or software - some require proprietary ISA cards to run them, for instance, and the software and docs can be nearly impossible to find. Though some do work with just serial comms software and have a terminal program built into the programmer's firmware.
#14
Posted Fri Jun 30, 2006 2:14 AM
I've decided to get one of these instead: http://www.futurlec....EPROMProg.shtml - Not much more than the Willems, and there is a distributor in Australia around the corner (kinda) from me too. Everyone who mentions it on the AA forums says it works well.
#15
Posted Fri Jun 30, 2006 8:00 AM
http://www.vgwiz.com/a26maxicart.html
There is also the maxicart. Super fast, and it dosn't get easier than this for testing bins.
Why hasn't anyone else mentioned it? Is it unpopular, buggy, or what?
There is also the maxicart. Super fast, and it dosn't get easier than this for testing bins.
Why hasn't anyone else mentioned it? Is it unpopular, buggy, or what?
#16
Posted Fri Jun 30, 2006 8:24 AM
MausBoy, on Fri Jun 30, 2006 10:00 AM, said:
http://www.vgwiz.com/a26maxicart.html
There is also the maxicart. Super fast, and it dosn't get easier than this for testing bins.
Why hasn't anyone else mentioned it? Is it unpopular, buggy, or what?
There is also the maxicart. Super fast, and it dosn't get easier than this for testing bins.
Why hasn't anyone else mentioned it? Is it unpopular, buggy, or what?
Personally, I never heard of it until just now. Thanks for the link!
Michael Rideout
#17
Posted Fri Jun 30, 2006 11:45 AM
I'd seen it before, but $85 is a lot of money for the limited features when $99 can buy the Krok Cart.
Also, there's no Mac support.
Also, there's no Mac support.
#18
Posted Fri Jun 30, 2006 2:55 PM
nmoog, on Fri Jun 30, 2006 3:14 AM, said:
I've decided to get one of these instead: http://www.futurlec....EPROMProg.shtml - Not much more than the Willems, and there is a distributor in Australia around the corner (kinda) from me too. Everyone who mentions it on the AA forums says it works well.
MausBoy said:
http://www.vgwiz.com/a26maxicart.html
There is also the maxicart. Super fast, and it dosn't get easier than this for testing bins.
There is also the maxicart. Super fast, and it dosn't get easier than this for testing bins.
http://www.futurlec....MEmulator.shtml
You'd need one of AA's boards, but with this thing I think you'd never need to disconnect stuff to reprogram a cart.
#19
Posted Fri Jun 30, 2006 3:45 PM
I don't like the idea of sticking a tv and a 2600 on my tiny computer desk, or the floor next to it, but I agree it would be a good choice for simplicity and speed if you have the space for a full on 'workstation'.
#20
Posted Fri Jun 30, 2006 6:00 PM
SpiceWare, on Sat Jul 1, 2006 3:45 AM, said:
I'd seen it before, but $85 is a lot of money for the limited features when $99 can buy the Krok Cart.
I was just wondering, I know you can re-use old carts with the AA boards - but can you re-use the old boards if you de-solder the roms? I've got 5 asteroid carts and it just feels wrong to go chucking everything in the bin!
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