2014-09-20

TP-LINK TD-W8951ND

WiFi/cable router with ADSL modem from late 2012.
Power consumption looks significantly lower than with W8950.

RaLink RT5390RL
RT63087N AFE (Analog Front-End) for VDSL2
EN25QH16-104HIP, 16Mbit NOR Flash.
LM1117.
34063-based voltage converter

Ralink RT63365E

TP-LINK TD-W8950ND

WiFi/cable router with ADSL modem. Manufactured in 2011, 802.11n support.



Quite unusual: Broadcom ADSL chip in SO8 package.
cFeon EN25F32-100HIP, 4MB SPI Flash memory: 64 blocks, 1024 4kB sectors, 256B per page. Block- and sector-erasable.
Two SMPSs based on 34063.

Second 4MB Flash chip and LM1117.
Atheros AR9285 with 2 antennas: external + PCB.


Pentagram P6391

Router with 4 LAN + 1 WAN ethernet ports and WiFi based on Atheros AR2318.

On the right: second antenna.
HY57V641620: 8MB SDRAM, 3.3V.
Marvell 88E6060 - low power ethernet switch with 5 independent PHYs, 6 independent MACs, auto crossover, lookup memory for 1024 MAC addresses. Interestingly, each PHY supports technology called Virtual Circuit Tester,  according to datasheet able to locate cable problems (open/short cable) with 1 meter precision, based on Time Domain Reflectometry. Chip can be configured with MDIO interface or with external serial EEPROM.
Classic DC/DC converter with 34063 and some external transistor in SO-8 package. There is rectifying bridge on board, router is intended to be powered with AC voltage.
25L1605 SPI Flash memory, 2MB, 32 sectors 64kB each, 10k P/E cycles, 3.3V.

Planet WAP-1963A

Planet WAP-1963A is a wireless access point compliant with 802.11b (11Mbps max) WiFi. Since original firmware supports only WEP it is pretty obsolete today.
AP is based on RTL8181 SoC, integrating Lexra LX5280 32bit RISC CPU, 802.11b MAC, 2 ethernet MACs and PCI bridge. Since same SoC is used by more popular devices, e.g. Ovislink WL-1120AP there are some homebrew linux distributions able to run on it (http://sourceforge.net/projects/shortlinux/, http://rtl8181.sourceforge.net/). See also: http://www.linux-mips.org/wiki/Realtek_SOC.
RAM: 2 x IS42S16800A (128Mb Synchronous DRAM, 3.3V from ISSI)
Philips SA2400A transceiver, applicable also for ISM purposes.
IP101 Single Port 10/100 Fast Ethernet Transceiver with MII interface.
Macronix 29LV160ABTC-90 16Mbit FLASH, interestingly switchable between 8 and 16-bit modes. Operating at 3.3V.
9435A (FDS9435A) P-Channel MOSFET and AIC1578 DC/DC converter.

2014-09-06

FX-350MS clone

 This very cheap (~$2.70) calculator was supposed to be my second/spare scientific calculator. Unfortunately it was disappointing in terms of both quality and function set.
This calculator is as generic as it could be. Under the sticker from local distributor there is just "Scientific Calculator" text, no brand name or anything like it anywhere (that may be a plus).
 Visually and functionally this looks like exact copy of Casio FX-350MS, although user manual was written poorly and quite incomplete.
 Device was dead on arrival with few of the LCD segments not working (exp part of the display).
 Another problem is very poor build quality, pressing buttons was causing severe distortions on LCD.
 My attempt to search for broken LCD connection and fix was proven unsuccessful as even careful manipulations were causing problems with other connections. Basically I believe that these connections are doomed to fail even on piece that is initially working. I have doubts if this thing passed DEKRA tests or these tests are worth a dime - when trying to search DEKRA seal database I couldn't get any result on ANY search term I've tried and this is supposed to be full-text search.

Another disappointment (same as with original Casio model) was lack of HEX mode considering it has advertised 240 functions.