Editing Salvage Challenge - Make Me Spin

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== Answers ==
 
== Answers ==
  
[[User:WestfW|WestfW]] 18:41, 7 February 2009 (PST)<br>
+
So far silenceChime in.
HmmphWay to post photos with no chip numbers readable...<br>
 
I've investigated similar "modules" from CD and floppy drives in the past.  All the logic is typically contained in that single big chip, but finding data for those chips can be very difficult.  There seems to be a lot of churn in the marketplace as vendors try to reduce costs, and even if the chip is from an identifiable company, and that happens to be a company nice enough to have downloadable datasheets, by the time the product hits the scrap heap the particular chip it uses is likely to be obsolete and no longer listed.<br>
 
Here is a representative chip from Sanyo: http://www.datasheetcatalog.org/datasheet/sanyo/ds_pdf_e/LB1987.pdf<br>
 
I also don't have any faith in the board-level signals being consistent from one vendor (or even one model) to another.  Sigh.  Reverse engineering a particular motor board is likely to be largely useless, since the next VCR motor board may have a different pinout, different chips, and different behavior.  One of the fine points of "salvage" is to pick a product that was released with a consistent design, in volume, so that if you figure it all out, you can get more, and so other people can use your data for ''their'' scrounging...
 
  
 
--[[User:Russ hensel|russ_hensel]] 19:38, 7 February 2009 (PST)
 
--[[User:Russ hensel|russ_hensel]] 19:38, 7 February 2009 (PST)

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