Hijacking oem hardware

Frederic Breitwieser frederic.breitwieser at mcione.com
Thu Sep 25 00:11:38 GMT 1997


>haven't tried it, but a wire map with nos. assigned to each pin
>and then resistance checks should do it.  You'd have to have the
>board empty, but then you could use a conductive brush to speed up
>the "scanning" process and once you finished with an area you wouldn't
>have to go back, so you would begin to eliminate portions of the PCB.

That's a good point Tom, all I have to say is I'm doing it the hard way.
I'd photocopy the top layer, getting the brightness settings right, then
use a friend's planer to rip off the top layer, then re-photocopy.  Most of
the time a lot of the copper would tear off, but the indentation in the
phoenelic layer would remain, and I'd touch it up with one of those
diskette-writing paint pens.  Then photocopy.

Um, Duh.

Frederic



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