Address | Length (bytes) | Contains |
---|---|---|
0x00000 | 16 | Text String “DUMBO FIL format” |
0x0020B | 5 | 5 byte value |
0x04200 | 32 | MS text string |
0x04220 | 15 | Ascii serial nr of MU |
0x0440B | 5 | 5 byte value |
0x10800 | ~ | Data start |
Address | Type |
0x00 | Partition 1 |
0x7ff000 | Partition 2 |
The connections of the small 8-pin IC:
Pin 1: GND (A0) Pin 2: NC (A1) Pin 3: NC (A2) Pin 4: NC (GND) Pin 5: to pin 22 of ASIC (SDA) Pin 6: to pins 20 and 21 of ASIC (SCL) Pin 7: to pin 3 of ASIC (WP) Pin 8: VCC (3.3V) At the bottom side of this chip is written:
PHILK2B
EL526
901IA2
Most plausible theory is that the IC is an I2C EEPROM memory. I’ve added in brackets possible 24CXXX family pin names. GND could be A0 because in most cases adress lines (A0-A2) are connected to ground.
Other theory (less plausible) is that it might be a NXP (Philips) P89LPC901FD microcontroller with its die upside down? archive.org mirror: here
When supplying 3.3 volts to the Memory Unit: Measurements at pins 5, 6, and 7 show that there is a clock signal of 5Mhz present on pin 7 (in burst of 16 cycles). Every 16 cycles, one bit is transferred on pin 6. 3ms after powerup data communication ends. Note: This looks like SPI, pin 7 - SCK, Pin 6 - /SS, Pin 5 - MODI.
But SPI needs four wires. It’s more like I2C which needs only two lines (SDA, SCL) and optionally WP (Write Protect).