Volt-modding the CH341a Mini Programmer - LFC

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  • čas přidán 28. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 351

  • @NebukadV
    @NebukadV Před 11 měsíci +33

    Important info for this mod!
    The output of the 3V3 regulator is not stable enough to work reliable with all Flash-Chips.
    After doing this mod, I was able to read/write multiple chips. But I came across one, that I could read fine, but the CH341 would "crash" aka. disconnect from USB, as soon as I would try to write to it.
    As it turned out, I needed to add some capacitance to the output of that 1117 3.3V regulator. In my case, I added a 1µF and another 100nF capacitor right between the 3.3V output and ground (pins 1 and 2 of the regulator). That fixed the issue.
    I hope, this comment can save some people from wasting a day debugging this ;)

    • @Hudsonkem
      @Hudsonkem Před 4 měsíci

      very nice. thanks.

    • @mauricioaguaidahernandez4715
      @mauricioaguaidahernandez4715 Před 3 měsíci

      Do you have images of how this modification would look like with the capacitors?
      I want to modify my ch341a but I have no idea how the modification would look like.

    • @NebukadV
      @NebukadV Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@mauricioaguaidahernandez4715 Honestly, I described the modification in detail in my initial comment ("I added a 1µF and another 100nF capacitor right between the 3.3V output and ground (pins 1 and 2 of the regulator"). If you cannot interpret this information, you should maybe not try this mod.
      I could take a picture, but how would I share it?

    • @mauricioaguaidahernandez4715
      @mauricioaguaidahernandez4715 Před 3 měsíci

      @@NebukadV Mediafire, i think with an image i can understand would look. Or you can make a video in your channel about your mod with the pinouts. I am understanding that you had added a 1µF and a 100nF capacitor just between the 3.3V output and ground (pins 1 and 2 of the regulator) i.e. 2 capacitors in series of 1uf and 100nF between pin 1 (thats is ADJ pin) and 2 ( V out) of the 1777 regulator. It should be like this video? -> m.czcams.com/video/ty_0VsCOKjU/video.html ?

    • @NuffMan_
      @NuffMan_ Před 25 dny +1

      I had the same problem, i added 1000uf 6.3v cap on top of the regulator to the output and ground.
      Now it works really well

  • @SPEXWISE
    @SPEXWISE Před 3 lety +28

    I love the way you explain things so clearly. I had teachers at school that were so intelligent that they just couldn't put themselves in my shoes and had no way of explaining things without getting too technical. I understood everything here. Cheers dude.

    • @Alberrttoo
      @Alberrttoo Před 2 lety

      True you wouldnt even notice you finished the whole video. He explains.everything pretty well that you would have to google.

  • @shambleslongplay3566
    @shambleslongplay3566 Před 3 lety +32

    "i find it easier to cut the wire to length"
    *proceeds to yell at the wire for being too fiddly*

    • @rosch448
      @rosch448 Před 3 lety +1

      lmao 🤣 that's graham

  • @GeertDroid
    @GeertDroid Před rokem +8

    Do not modify this programmer, it's just fine the way it is.
    This misinformation was spread about this programmer. It neatly does 3.3 volts and not 5 volts as many claimed. It is now debunked. Do the test yourself, take a flash chip and put it in the zip socket and program, while programming you measure the voltages on the pin. You will now see that 5 volts are not measured anywhere, but 3.3 volts instead. People who understand ohm's law will realize that the wrong measurements were made with no load.

  • @danielmelendrez1616
    @danielmelendrez1616 Před 3 lety +7

    This is honestly the type of video that I like. Technical, detailed and educational...

    • @filda2005
      @filda2005 Před 11 měsíci

      also fake news, giving you a stupid ideas

    • @kingeling
      @kingeling Před 6 dny

      He doesn't probe for voltage during a flash. It has been demonstrated and proven that these volt mods are pointless.

  • @OriginalMG1
    @OriginalMG1 Před 2 lety +4

    Thanks so much for the fantastic step by step video good sir!
    Successfully modded my own with this guide which led to a successful bios chip reprogram (following next video) and brought a dead computer back to life. You are the MAN!
    Cheers

  • @Customer22374
    @Customer22374 Před rokem +11

    all these mods unnecessary . the programmer will adjust itself to 3.3v when programming .I tried it myself and programmed many chips fine . also Sorin proved it he has a video about this matter . not downvoting your video but it is just unnecessary work .

    • @JeremyMartens-b7z
      @JeremyMartens-b7z Před 2 dny

      Yeah, the 5v+ only hold up on 100th of a milliamp. Even says in the IC Datasheet. So very unnecessary and even worsens reliability

  • @cinlung
    @cinlung Před 3 měsíci

    Thanks to your video. I managed to make a switch to switch between 3.3v and 5v. The reason I made the switch because I saw someone said that some chip cannot turn on with 3.3v. It needs 5v. Awesome video.

  • @scouse1967
    @scouse1967 Před 2 lety +1

    Lovely Jubbly. Bought one of these last year to flash the correct BIOS file to a fake GTX 1050 GPU. The first programmer i bought only lasted about a week and went faulty, so i bought another and have just followed your guide here. Brilliant instructions and top notch :)

  • @racejay
    @racejay Před 2 lety +9

    Hello to all. Actually, there's a much easy way to do this fix; you just have to cut a track on the board and add a plastic jumper on pins labeled '3.3V' and '5V'. I've have successfully flashed a Winbond 25Q64FVSIG which is a 3V chip.

    • @Adamant_IT
      @Adamant_IT  Před 2 lety +5

      I had a quick look and I think I see the method you're talking about. The 5v rail going to the IC is on a trace on the bottom of the board, several people had mentioned that cutting this trace might be a better method. The chap whose video guide I followed didn't want to do this because he wasn't sure where else it goes - but the only other place it goes is to the 5v jumper pin. So yea, cutting it would then enable you to bridge the 5 and 3.3v headers to avoid soldering.
      Part of me doesn't like cutting traces, but these things are so cheap that who cares about making the mod 'reversible' anyway.

    • @medgrey4821
      @medgrey4821 Před 2 lety +4

      when you put ic 3.3v the programmer detect automatically and adjust the voltage at 3.3v , i measured it during the process , i modified the programmer exactly what i saw on this video but i back to let it original and it works fine

    • @Slywardthegamecat
      @Slywardthegamecat Před 2 lety

      Hi Antonio! On my CH341a, there are 2 x 5v headers. One is next to a header that says GND, the other is a header that says 3.3v.
      Which 5v header do I bridge to the 3.3v header?
      Sorry to ask, i'm just a bit of a noob. I think I know which trace to cut.

    • @racejay
      @racejay Před 2 lety +1

      Hi Gamecat! I have posted it on my channel. Check it out!

    • @Slywardthegamecat
      @Slywardthegamecat Před 2 lety

      ​@@racejay cheers Antonio!

  • @ademgdk6573
    @ademgdk6573 Před 2 lety +4

    Alternatively, you can solder 3.3V zener diodes between SPI data pins and Gnd pin of the zif socket , on the back side of the board. The zener diode limited the peak voltage to 3.3V. Everyone could not solder tiny SMD pins, so zif socket's pins much bigger and soldering too easy instead of SMD IC pins.
    You need two zener diodes; between MOSI and GND, CLK and GND.
    I2C pins are open drain type and requires external pull-ups, you don't need the voltage limiting operation for this pins.

    • @V0S1N0
      @V0S1N0 Před rokem

      There's a cheap 1.8v adapter board that some of the CH341a Mini Programmer have started shipping with. I started to worry about adapting to 1.8v before realizing I already got the adapter in the kit. :)

    • @brad8122
      @brad8122 Před rokem

      @@V0S1N0 he isn't talking about the adapters to 1.8V

  • @biproservices1346
    @biproservices1346 Před 3 lety +5

    Nice job Adamant IT. I think a bit of solder mask on the pad instead of the caption tape would be more secure for you as this tape may have gone after a time. Great work after all!!!

  • @LordDarthSidiousss
    @LordDarthSidiousss Před 3 lety +12

    Nice fix, if you measure pin 9 and the capacitor C4 you will see that it is the bypass cap you mention. Might be easier to solder the 3.3v wire there from the 3.3v regulator instead of directly on pin 9.

    • @michaelboth6844
      @michaelboth6844 Před 2 lety +1

      What´s the use of the wire? Pin 9 is fed 3.3V on my CH341 anyway. And on my device there is no continuity to capacitor C4, but to C3.

    • @LordDarthSidiousss
      @LordDarthSidiousss Před 2 lety +4

      @@michaelboth6844 Sounds like you have a different board layout/version ? If your version is already feeding 3.3V on pin 9 then you don't need to add any wire to the bypass capacitor or pin 9.

    • @michaelboth6844
      @michaelboth6844 Před 2 lety +3

      @@LordDarthSidiousss Unfortunately, there is no clear indication of board revision on the programmer itself. Interestingly, the IC itself reads CH341B, not A. The back reads "CH341A MinProgramment", like in French. And on the top side, near the bios chip connector it says "CH341A Pro". I bought it for cheap from a Chinese seller on German eBay. Very confusing.

    • @LordDarthSidiousss
      @LordDarthSidiousss Před 2 lety +1

      @@michaelboth6844 I believe you can still mod this version that you have if you go from 3.3V regulator middle pin to C3 and from there also to the lifted pin of the CH341 with a wire ?

    • @michaelboth6844
      @michaelboth6844 Před 2 lety +1

      @@LordDarthSidiousss That´s what I did. Pin 28 was 5V after all, so I lifted it and soldered a wire to the regulator. I did the wire on Pin 9 as well, but I don´t know if that had any benefit. If you look at the schematic shown by Graham, Pin 9 is labeled "V3", so I guess having 3.3V there is expected?

  • @user-cansu602
    @user-cansu602 Před 7 měsíci

    You saved my life while repairing a bricked laptop.

  • @lezyhun
    @lezyhun Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you very much, in this is what I needed to see, I watched bunch of your videos as well as they are entertaining to learn in a very easy way. Waiting for you to watch you using it and flash bios chips with it, have a great day.

  • @Skungalunga
    @Skungalunga Před 3 lety +2

    Kudos for crediting the source!

  • @JosepsGSX
    @JosepsGSX Před 3 lety +4

    I'd say microsoldering isn't yet a field you've superbly mastered. Not a bad thing at all, don't get me wrong. Can't wait to have you sharing future jobs to see that improving.
    Regarding the two irons with a single power supply. The main downside I see is that you can't work with both simultaneously. I've found very late in my electronics hobby that using two irons to remove parts and particularly SMD components, is just brilliant. I'd suggest giving it a try if you haven't tested that.
    Are you using a standard vinyl cable? That would concern me a bit. I got the TL100 with the transformer having a silicone cable and that's life-saving for me, after several burned iron cables over the years. The red USB-C silicone cable that Pinecil has in its store looks fantastic too.

  • @christopherjackson2157

    Thanks for including your sources. Too many people don't. Much appreciated.

  • @max0r4axor
    @max0r4axor Před 3 lety +7

    Looking at the schematic you could just cut the trace that feeds the vcc and install a jumper to pin 6 and 7 instead of lifting the vcc off the pad. Just make sure to cut the right side of the trace. Then just finish the 3v connection.

    • @user-cw3nb8rc9e
      @user-cw3nb8rc9e Před 2 lety

      Could you please explain more in detail? With your method, do you still need to play with soldering wires?

    • @max0r4axor
      @max0r4axor Před 2 lety +1

      @@user-cw3nb8rc9e you still have to solder one wire

    • @user-cw3nb8rc9e
      @user-cw3nb8rc9e Před 2 lety

      @@max0r4axor What about supplying this programmer with 3.3V? It would not produce 5V then, but might work?

    • @max0r4axor
      @max0r4axor Před 2 lety +1

      @@user-cw3nb8rc9e looking up the Datasheet for this if the chip is supplied with 3.3v you will have to supply 3.3v to the v3 pin number 9. To me it was easier to cut a trace use a standard jumper between 6 and 7 and solder a small wire to the 3.3v voltage regulator and pin 9

    • @user-cw3nb8rc9e
      @user-cw3nb8rc9e Před 2 lety

      @@max0r4axor Good tip. Where is "6 and 7" Is it the GND and 5V at the end of the pin row with jumper?

  • @retrocomputinggrotto
    @retrocomputinggrotto Před 6 měsíci

    Clearly explained and well videod showing clearly what needs to be done - I'm off to modify mine now so wish me luck!...

    • @retrocomputinggrotto
      @retrocomputinggrotto Před 6 měsíci

      All good! Done exactly as you said in this video and I'm now getting 3.3V on the data lines! Just need to work out how to use the 1.8V adapter I have now...

  • @philippepourrat2256
    @philippepourrat2256 Před rokem

    Merci mon ami, following your clear instructions I saved my mobo following your clear instructions.
    ... and your English is perfect for me 🙂

  • @ZMEK1
    @ZMEK1 Před 2 lety +2

    Looking forward on videos running both your main flasher and this!

  • @classmaster
    @classmaster Před 2 lety

    Thank you man, saved my chips. No wonder why some of my chips got damage and probably some with a % of corrupt data.

  • @frankbumstead3838
    @frankbumstead3838 Před 3 lety +19

    Well done, also good that you have split your videos as not everyone likes the two guys format.

  • @tolman4tor257
    @tolman4tor257 Před 3 lety +1

    I learn so much from your videos😁 thank you 😁 great channel 👍

  • @DanielsGameVault
    @DanielsGameVault Před 3 lety +3

    You can get pre-made adapters just as cheap as the CH341 itself, which piggy-back the ZIF socket and come with their own ZIF in which you connect your clip/breakout board and ultimately the IC :) I also suggest pulling strands out of stranded wire to make really thin jumpers (whenever they don't pose the risk of touching anything they shouldn't, since they're obviously not going to be insulated)

    • @twizz420
      @twizz420 Před rokem +1

      I like pulling small transformers out of old electronics (satellite and cable receiver boxes, dvd players, etc.) and then unwrap the enameled wire and use that for jumpers. You'd be surprised how much wire one transformer can hold. Most transformers probably hold enough wire to last a lifetime of jumping pads.
      Instead of pre-cutting the piece of jump wire, I use a longer piece than necessary, and then instead of pre-scratching the surface to remove the enamel, I just use the tip of the iron to scrape it, that and the heat usually gets rid of the enamel. And then just run the wire where you need, then solder the wire down where it meets the pad, then either clip off the spare wire or if it's thin enough just rock it back and forth until it breaks where it sticks out of the solder joint.

  • @JAMSHIDMOBILELAB
    @JAMSHIDMOBILELAB Před rokem +2

    Ch341a pin no 28 is vcc 4.5v Minimum to 5.3v Maximum support in this line… i don’t know why you put 3.3v in vcc

  • @bones1225
    @bones1225 Před 3 lety

    Hail to the “ bush mechanic “, (should be your slogan). Skills and thanks for a short and concise vid.

  • @uhmgawa6533
    @uhmgawa6533 Před 2 lety

    To finesse lifting a gull wing pin use a a sliver cut from as thin a stainless steel shim as you can find, heat the joint and slide the shim between pin and pad. Solder won't adhere to SS which is also a relatively poor heat conductor and together will being thin and low mass will minimally cool the joint during operation. Burnishing the cut edge of the shim will help prevent it from hanging up on the pin or land as it is slid between them.

  • @ProtekNickz
    @ProtekNickz Před 5 měsíci

    Just bought one of these, going to have to do this mod xD, cheers for the info, great work :).

  • @butaudo1918
    @butaudo1918 Před 3 lety +1

    Awesome, I have one of these and I was looking forward to this one.

  • @thegreathitsstation
    @thegreathitsstation Před rokem +10

    There is no problem to fix,once you put the chip inside you`ll get 3.3

    • @Shadaole
      @Shadaole Před 8 měsíci +1

      yeah, they have no idea

    • @Tim_Small
      @Tim_Small Před 5 měsíci

      I used to work in the semiconductor equipment manufacturing industry. If you're assuming that there is some sort of negotiation or automatic voltage detection going on, then I think you are mistaken. The reason that you're measuring 3.3v on the pins (with the chip that you're trying) is that the flash ICs have internal ESD (electrostatic discharge) protection diodes built in, which are included in the design to suppress very short term (e.g. microsecond) voltage surges by clamping I/O pin voltage levels to the IC's supply voltage. This only works if the current supplied by the CH341a on it's signal lines exceeds the current draw of the flash chip. The unmodified design relies on this hack, but it's outside of the spec of the chips, and there's no way I would rely on it. On low power flash chips the flash chips VCC will float up to 5v, and you will fry the chip. On any chip, you risk frying the ESD diodes, and then the chip is also gone. If you look at the manufacturer datasheets for the flash ICs, they always have an "absolute maximum" voltage for signal pins, and for 3.3v flash chips it's usually about 4v. Not 5.1v.

  • @juancarlospereza.4030
    @juancarlospereza.4030 Před 3 lety +1

    muchisimas gracias por el gran aporte ,grandes exitos para ti

  • @QuentinStephens
    @QuentinStephens Před 3 lety +3

    I enjoyed that. Was there a reason why the data lines were at 5V originally? If so, is it worth adding a switch? Or is the thing so cheap that you just have two?

    • @Adamant_IT
      @Adamant_IT  Před 3 lety +6

      Really dumb design flaw. Lots of people scratching their heads over this one. If the CH341a chip couldn't run on 3.3v it would be a much harder issue to solve, but given that the chip is happy at 3.3v, it's a bit of an unknown.

    • @Davpana
      @Davpana Před 2 lety +1

      Watching the chip's datasheet there's a 0,1v over the maximum ratings for the original use of 5v VCC and this is slightly bad unless the datasheet is not right, someone with scope can probe the effective DI pin if it exceeds 4,4v

  • @somber8233
    @somber8233 Před 11 měsíci +3

    I'm not sure if this would be necessary when the current is less than 1 milliamp.

    • @radekzmazur3389
      @radekzmazur3389 Před 10 měsíci +1

      This mod is unnecessary. videos that this mod is needed is spreading disinformation.

  • @KnowledgeConnect-kx5ws
    @KnowledgeConnect-kx5ws Před 5 měsíci

    You can apply soldering mask with UV light for tighten the jumper wires

  • @johnwells558
    @johnwells558 Před rokem

    I just swapped my 8 tb bios to new board, great vid , thought i lost all my data,

  • @chandmohammad4195
    @chandmohammad4195 Před 2 lety

    Very helpfull video. Solved my "verification error" problem by this modification, thank u so much.

  • @KKM57P
    @KKM57P Před 3 měsíci

    It is not necessary to desolder pin 28. There is a track on the underside to the left of the C which must be cut. A jumper then be set between 3.3 and 5V. Now connect the voltage regulator in the middle to C3, which connects pin 9 direct to 3.3V.

  • @n13ldo
    @n13ldo Před 3 lety +4

    You don't need to scrape the enamel off the wire. Applying soldering iron + fluxed solder burns it off. Try it.

    • @craig2963
      @craig2963 Před 3 lety +1

      I always just grab a lighter and hit the end of the wire with the flame for a couple of seconds...you can see when it is gone.

  • @brslv.
    @brslv. Před 3 lety +7

    Not gonna lie i could get used to two videos a week.

    • @deminybs
      @deminybs Před 3 lety

      Right?? watching his videos makes me wanna buy more stuff (soldering iron, hot air station, the little chip programmers etc. Lol
      however I spend enough money on my other hobbies 😂😂
      just need more time and money and I can do them all!!

    • @Adamant_IT
      @Adamant_IT  Před 3 lety +4

      If I can keep it up! I've got lots in the pipeline at the moment, but two videos a week largely pivots on having enough material.

  • @laptopandcellphonerepairs

    This jumper is not necessary actually as the programmer runs 3.3v and has a 3.3v & 5v Jumper on the side so what the jumper actually does is that if you put a jumper, it overrides the 3.3v and makes it 5v remove the jumper and its back to 3.3v. It is located on the side where your CLK, CS, MOSI, MIOS, GND,3.3V & 5V pins are, just put a jumper on 3.3v & 5v to get 5v.

  • @T8-Schrader
    @T8-Schrader Před 11 měsíci +2

    I don't think you have to do this because soon as chip connect with software
    voltage automatically dropped to 3.3v so you don't have to mod the programmer now

    • @AuDiGo6
      @AuDiGo6 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Correct. Lot of stupid things and people around the internet.

    • @Gelip12
      @Gelip12 Před 4 měsíci

      Yes, but not when it is connected only during the operation read/write/verify, the voltage on CLK pin drops to about 1V

  • @tonyhawthorne3222
    @tonyhawthorne3222 Před 3 lety

    Great stuff Adam .think i'll have to curb my coffee intake before attempting that fix.

  • @arifryo6823
    @arifryo6823 Před rokem +1

    but what if i want to write 24c? isnt it need 5v?

  • @DennisKyne
    @DennisKyne Před 3 lety

    very interesting Graham, keep it up please

  • @toninica
    @toninica Před rokem +2

    What is the point of this tutorial? I have the same programmer and I haven't modified it at all. To rewrite the memories, I use adapters and it's ok (with jumper set to 1-2) What you don't say is that: jumper on 2-3 is for the ISP interface. I use it successfully as USBisp and in Arduino IDE.

  • @fusionlore77
    @fusionlore77 Před 2 lety

    Love your style! Great video

  • @MrWaalkman
    @MrWaalkman Před 9 měsíci

    Tip 1) Get yourself some wire wrap/Kynar wire and lose the enameled wire.
    Tip 2) Still have your enameled wire? "Strip" it by burning off the enamel with your soldering iron. Sanding or scraping your wire will only make it weaker. And you are going to solder it anyway.

    • @Adamant_IT
      @Adamant_IT  Před 9 měsíci +1

      I never seem to have any luck burning off the enamel. I've tried it several times in several ways and it just doesn't strip. I've no doubt it works because I've seen people doing it, but yea, never works for me, so I end up scraping.

    • @MrWaalkman
      @MrWaalkman Před 9 měsíci

      @@Adamant_IT The way that I do it is to create a healthy-sized blob of molten solder and run the end of the wire through it. I don't heat the wire, I heat the solder. This way the heat is going to get to all of the wire and the enamel should come off easily.

  • @randysmith7094
    @randysmith7094 Před 2 lety +3

    What if I remove the zero ohm resistor from the main 5V source and just use a couple diodes to drop the voltage to around 3.8V?

  • @gymstrengthhakim8453
    @gymstrengthhakim8453 Před rokem +1

    I do this but it not working , when i want erase the chip , it's disconnect by itself, what's wrong?

    • @TheCustomFHD
      @TheCustomFHD Před měsícem

      Ive read you should add capacitors to the 3.3v rail

  • @bulletstrongholder644
    @bulletstrongholder644 Před 3 lety +1

    I like this channel

  • @Funny_Videos691
    @Funny_Videos691 Před 3 lety

    Nice video Adamant keep going 🤠🍷

  • @ExplodingWaffle101
    @ExplodingWaffle101 Před 2 lety +1

    i did this mod back when i sucked at soldering. broke off a pin on the ic, so i had to scrape the plastic and solder to the lead frame 😆 still works tho

  • @cemsengul16
    @cemsengul16 Před 2 lety +1

    Is there any ch341a programmer that is sold preconfigured to 3.3 volts? I do not have any soldering experience and would prefer to just buy one premodded.

    • @Adamant_IT
      @Adamant_IT  Před 2 lety +1

      Yes, look for the version 1.6 or higher, with the green PCB, it has a voltage selector switch on it.

    • @cemsengul16
      @cemsengul16 Před 2 lety

      @@Adamant_IT Thanks for the reply. I am considering buying to one to mod the bios of my 2021 Razer Blade Advanced to unlock the overclocking menu on bios.

  • @pp3v42_g3h
    @pp3v42_g3h Před 3 lety +4

    Great cheap programmer, but they should fix this problem after years... The only problem is that it can't detect all the 1.8V chips even with the adapter board. AM4 mobos and Nvidia 10 20 30 series cards have 1.8V SPI eeprom chips. (Maybe some chinese software is better than Flashrom, I didn't try them.)
    You should get the 1.8V adapter and programming clip kit, it's almost the same price.

    • @pp3v42_g3h
      @pp3v42_g3h Před 3 lety +1

      You can find pin 9 on the capacitor under the 1117 LDO, it makes the mod look professional :)

    • @DannyWilliamH
      @DannyWilliamH Před 3 lety +1

      Correct me if I'm wrong but doesn't the 1.8v adapter board still use 5v (3.3 after mod) unless you desolder the chip and use the adapter's pads?

    • @B.E.H.
      @B.E.H. Před 2 lety

      @@DannyWilliamH good question!!!

  • @bastisebastian2609
    @bastisebastian2609 Před rokem +2

    Can I use the 3.3V on my bios chip 25Q256JWEQ which is for MSI B550m mortar wifi? Or do i have to use 1.8v?

  • @dsi7782
    @dsi7782 Před rokem

    Thank you so much 👍now I can program my eeprom 👍👍👍👍

  • @andynull8869
    @andynull8869 Před rokem

    Thank you.... I have the same iron. I love it

  • @SaiyedR
    @SaiyedR Před 3 lety

    We love moding gadgets keep it up.

  • @azhenxanzhorrye74
    @azhenxanzhorrye74 Před 2 lety

    Work..recomended .thank master

  • @orlandobarredo3008
    @orlandobarredo3008 Před 2 lety

    NICE TUTORIAL SIR😍😍😍

  • @totosh36
    @totosh36 Před 3 lety +5

    Thank you for this « mod ». I am looking forward to the next video as flashing bios chips has too little great content on youtube. I am actually waiting for more than one year to accomplish a project where I have to flash a bios chip but still could not do it yet. Great content.

  • @dilanoclarke9163
    @dilanoclarke9163 Před rokem

    Thank you bro...I will mod my programmer

  • @computersrepaircotesaint-l7407

    Great videos thx for sharing

  • @0ctivate
    @0ctivate Před rokem +3

    FYI Apparently this mod is not necessary. Here's another video about it
    czcams.com/video/J8-Sh7DjiXw/video.html

  • @_kicaBo_
    @_kicaBo_ Před rokem

    @Adamant_IT - What camera or microscope do you use to zoom in? Thanks,

  • @TheBeeman410
    @TheBeeman410 Před rokem +2

    Correct me if I’m wrong..
    (And I have been wrong before…)
    Yes it’s 5v but there’s less than .5 amp..+-
    You’re not going to burn anything with almost no current…
    Check it and let me know..🍻

  • @8peterp
    @8peterp Před 2 lety

    done modding after your viceo thanks. important to verify the bios after flashing when using clip ,sadly i didn't do it ,flashed bad bios and when computer turned on burnt a charging mosfet. not 100% was this the reason of course but laptop was perfect before bricking

    • @maybelbdidit
      @maybelbdidit Před 5 měsíci +1

      A bad BIOS wouldn’t blow a charging mosfet.

  • @marv6597
    @marv6597 Před 3 lety +1

    Adamant IT Thank you, I just have a dumb question.
    I have watched someone on this Ch341a who added and soldered a wire on pin 9 and soldered it on pin 28 of course after he lift it (pin 28) and connected to the volt regulator like you did but without having a second wire on the volt regulator I mean there was only 1 wire soldered on volt regulator coming only from pin 28.
    Question is is it still the same? Thank you.

    • @Adamant_IT
      @Adamant_IT  Před 3 lety +2

      Yea the anchor pin and the middle pin of the reg are both outputs, you can use either.

    • @marv6597
      @marv6597 Před 3 lety

      @@Adamant_IT thank you

  • @gamalkhalaf8017
    @gamalkhalaf8017 Před rokem

    Very beautiful my dear brother and forward

  • @Ben-ld1qi
    @Ben-ld1qi Před 2 lety +1

    Er, I wanted if I could ask you something since I hardly know anything regarding electricity. I connected the CH341A from my PC to another PC's motherboard to flash a BIOS onto the chip. For some odd reason, I don't know why, I turned on the other PC while the CH341A was still connected to it from my main PC. As soon as I hit the power button on the other PC, my main PC rebooted. Later on I also discovered that the sound doesn't work on my main PC anymore. Could it somehow be that one I turned on the other PC while CH341A was connected to its BIOS chip it somehow sent a surge back to my PC and killed my onboard soundcard? It did afterall manage to cause my PC to reboot. Thanks!

  • @graydog7
    @graydog7 Před 2 lety

    Great Video.. Thanks. This is probably like asking how long is a bit of string but I have one of these USB programmers which I managed to damage when it came into contact with the metal PC casing. Now the power LED flashes briefly then goes out. I've changed the regulator chip but that hasn't fixed it. Is there a particular component(s) on the board that is(are) more vulnerable to a short?

  • @Marwan_167
    @Marwan_167 Před 2 lety +2

    is the 1.8 adapter works with 5v or should i mod the ch341 to 3.3v ? @Adamant IT

    • @Adamant_IT
      @Adamant_IT  Před 2 lety +4

      1.8v adaptor is fine 👍
      I've tested this and 1.8v adaptors will regulate the data lines down to 1.8 as well.

    • @Marwan_167
      @Marwan_167 Před 2 lety

      @@Adamant_IT Thank you so much

  • @xxDrain
    @xxDrain Před rokem +4

    I'd like to see a demonstration of the unmodified version actually causing some harm. Are there any known BIOS chips that die with this thing? I just used a bios programmer at work for the first time and it happened to be this exact one, unmodified. So I ordered one for myself too. Now I'm wondering how crucial this mod is.

    • @solymi
      @solymi Před rokem

      it isn't. Theres no current to it: czcams.com/video/J8-Sh7DjiXw/video.html

    • @AuDiGo6
      @AuDiGo6 Před 11 měsíci +3

      There is no problem with this programmer. Only lot of stupid people around the internet. If you connect the programmer with plugged bios chip, voltage will change from 5V to 3.3V automatically.

  • @pryonosantosa8742
    @pryonosantosa8742 Před 21 dnem

    will it work for eeprom that uses 1.8v voltage?

  • @mdmanik1669
    @mdmanik1669 Před rokem

    Wow nice 👍

  • @carpetrug01
    @carpetrug01 Před měsícem

    The data lines don't go up to 5v when you connect the chip. You don't need to modify this.

  • @Tefery
    @Tefery Před 3 lety

    What flux do you use? I can't find a proper fix that will get cleaned with alcohol. Thanks for you videos!!

  • @johnwells558
    @johnwells558 Před rokem

    Great vid

  • @badgerfool1980
    @badgerfool1980 Před rokem

    You, and everybody in the comments section should probably watch the video by Electronics Repair School on this programmer.

  • @nikkisixx2878
    @nikkisixx2878 Před 7 měsíci

    It doesn't work for CH341B. For CH341A only. Because when the 9th pin of the microcircuit is in contact with the 1117 in the recording mode, there will be freezes and scraps of the programmer from the PC.
    For CH341A there is also bad advice here to connect the 9th pin and 1117 with a piece of wire. because when you apply 5 volts to pin 28, your microchip will fail. It is not necessary to install a wire, but a removable jumper. if you need to switch to 5 volts, you will remove the jumper and use this jumper to short the 3.3 and 5 volt pins that are next to the zip panel.

    • @nikkisixx2878
      @nikkisixx2878 Před 7 měsíci

      czcams.com/video/_MNZ6DtvAUA/video.html

  • @brandonpiper5000
    @brandonpiper5000 Před 2 lety +1

    Is there any way to add a switch to easily switch back and forth to 3.3V and 5V?

    • @nikkisixx2878
      @nikkisixx2878 Před 7 měsíci

      Yes, there is such a way. But it is still necessary to raise 28 pins and feed it with 3.3 volts. After going back to 5 volts you can put a jumper on the two pins that are next to the zip panel. One of them has 3.3 volts, the other has 5 volts. So close them, then 5 volts will appear on pin 28. After removing the jumper, you will return to 3.3 volts of power. Everything is simple.

  • @MannyRD1844
    @MannyRD1844 Před 2 lety

    Great video, I'll recommend add some hot glue on top..

  • @XDPower94
    @XDPower94 Před 3 lety +2

    Is it possibile bypass t2?

    • @B.E.H.
      @B.E.H. Před 2 lety

      Good question!

  • @campbellmorrison8540
    @campbellmorrison8540 Před rokem

    I thought the socket could supply 5v too so will a 5V chip program with data lines at 3.3V or do we have to swop the chip supply back?

  • @richspillman4191
    @richspillman4191 Před 3 lety

    Yer doin' great, kid.

  • @shane6845
    @shane6845 Před 6 měsíci

    For some reason, I did this, I get 3.3v, but it won’t recognize any chips I connect it to.
    I have a second one I’ll do this too and see if it’s the same result.

  • @vextorfx6243
    @vextorfx6243 Před rokem

    I broke the pin 6 of u2 thx :)

  • @qsdrfghgujfddyffguff
    @qsdrfghgujfddyffguff Před 2 lety

    good information

  • @adifirdaus8204
    @adifirdaus8204 Před rokem

    i did this, but the data line measuring 3.1 volt, altough the ch341a vcc is 3.3 volt

  • @Denis_Borovik
    @Denis_Borovik Před 2 lety

    Привет! Ответь, пожалуйста, с какой целью была эта переделка с 5 вольт на 3,3 вольта? Ведь программатор выполняет свою работу и без такой переделки.
    Спасибо за видео!

    • @Ivan_Safronov
      @Ivan_Safronov Před rokem

      Хай! Прогеру в принцип по-болту, а МС-м памяти нет, они разн бывают. См. Оффициал. доку на каждую конкретную.

  • @LIONERRANT2011
    @LIONERRANT2011 Před 2 lety

    thank you

  • @Jim5150jvc
    @Jim5150jvc Před rokem

    Can the Ch341a be used to program an ATtiny13V microcontroller?

  • @Slywardthegamecat
    @Slywardthegamecat Před 2 lety

    Hi there :) Did you use any magnification tech in order to do the micro soldering?

  • @YOTUBADICT
    @YOTUBADICT Před 11 měsíci

    Debe tener mejor pulso en la mano porque las soldaduras deben ser más precisas para cosas micro. Y no ser tan tacaño con el estaño. Pero excelente video. Cual es el link para los software de programación de BIOS o UEFI?

  • @ebbflow4591
    @ebbflow4591 Před rokem

    Excellent stuff,thanks!! What's the intro music?

  • @Vinnie2x
    @Vinnie2x Před rokem

    Hey. Not sure if you still read these comments. Can you tell me why you have to tie pin 28 to GND. Why could you not leave it lifted and untied. Would it not just be open. After all. We are basically disconnecting the 5v rail from the IC. Also the CH341a itself requires 5v to operate does it not? So if Pin 28 is tied to GND how does it source 5v. It must actually run of 3.3v as well?

    • @Adamant_IT
      @Adamant_IT  Před rokem +1

      We're connecting it to the 3.3v rail, which then powers the CH341a chip

    • @Vinnie2x
      @Vinnie2x Před rokem

      @@Adamant_IT Appreciate the reply. So in the original configuration it runs off 5v and the data lines also have the potential to push 5. ?

  • @ChrisDiEs
    @ChrisDiEs Před 2 lety

    at the bottom of the programmer you can solder the bios to work at 3.3 v, I have tested it successfully with a mxic25l6406e and "as programmer", it would be a good idea to make an adapter

  • @luigiprovencher
    @luigiprovencher Před rokem

    Do you know how to connect a SOIC 8-Pin Test Clip and DIP adapter to a raspberry pi 3 b+ so that it can be used to fix BIOS? I have this board but I want to learn how to do it with just the raspberry pi and the clip and dip adapter and some jumper cables and that's it.