Eric, I would be interested in some of your projects. Let me know what they are and I'll see if I have anything that you'd be interested in too. Thanks and Regards, Jim Paul ---------- > From: Eric Borcherding > To: PICLIST@MITVMA.MIT.EDU > Subject: SOIC to DIP Adapters > Date: Monday, November 16, 1998 12:56 AM > > Frank, and to all on this INET Info exchange. > > > I could use some of the 28SOICs to DIPs for the PIC16C76. > Would Pay. > > For those that like to swap projects, I am new to this forum and have > a few killer applications with running code and good schematics. Send > Email Direct with Subject PICBUDDY because my mail is overloaded > from this PICLIST, and I need a sorter... > > I could use some of the 28SOICs to DIPs for the PIC16C76. > Even ones for the PIC12C509 for simplicity. These a 4$ at Aries. > Would Pay. > > Eric Borcherding MSEE PIC12C509, PIC16C76-7 and PIC17C756 user. > > > ...saw the message below about soic to dip adapters. > ...I'm in the process of developing and building such adapters > at very reasonable cost. The soic test socket (3M) cost about > $57 to about $75 in single quantity depending on which one you > want, and the pcb is about $5 for a total cost of about $62 to > $80 each. By the way, the pcb is designed to handle either the > 18 pin soic socket as well as the 28 pin soic socket. > Hope this helps those who have been thinking along these lines. > Regards, m Frank > > Mike DeMetz wrote: > > > >Are the adapters just straight pin to pin (by function, not number), or > >are they more complex. > > > > There are SOIC to DIP adapters that can be used on the Picstarts, but > > they cost about as much as a Picstart.