Sure, I see that now. Sorry about that. That makes that Dataflash pretty ideal, then. There are other serial flash products available, from ST at least, through Mouser, but Atmel's are probably more available. Note that if you request a sample from Atmel, don't expect it to come very quickly. Mike H. > > I'm using this product line right now...the bit density is actually > > 8 Mbit, not Mbyte, so that 8 Meg serial chip is actually a 1 MB > > chip. It's in fact not really that, either, because it comes with > > 264 bytes to the page, rather than 256, so you get a few > > extra kB. When it says 2.7v only, it actually means that one > > needn't provide, say, 13v programming bias a la PIC > > programming. It actually runs across 2.7-3.6v, with 5v tolerant > > inputs. > >The original post did specify 1 Meg x 8 bits, so I thought that >the chip I found was OK. I haven't used any of these parts, so >I was just going by what was in the catalog. > > >> I'm haing a problem figuring out the best (cheapest) way to > >> store 1024k x 8 (8Mb) of data for a battery powered data logging > >> application. The data doesn't have to be retained on power loss. > > >> Thnaks in Advance, > >> Aaron > >John Power > >-- >http://www.piclist.com hint: The list server can filter out subtopics >(like ads or off topics) for you. See http://www.piclist.com/#topics _________________________________________________________________ Best Restaurant Giveaway Ever! Vote for your favorites for a chance to win $1 million! http://local.msn.com/special/giveaway.asp -- http://www.piclist.com hint: The list server can filter out subtopics (like ads or off topics) for you. See http://www.piclist.com/#topics