Can someone please send a copy of the invasm.zip file as an attachment to
me at this e-mail address? I'd really appreciate it... don't want to have
to set up a Yahoo ID, etc. just to snarf one file. I can test them on my
1662A.
The PDF copy of the 1997 HP T&M Catalog that I'm looking at implies that
the inverse assemblers will run on 1660s and their 1670 deep memory
cousins. On p. 390 there is presumably a screenshot of an inverse assembler
running on a 1670 series machine. Footnotes on p. 396 imply that they may
even run on 1650 machines.
I don't think even a preprocessor is necessarily required? I don't see
anything the preprocessor would do, that the standard pods and test leads
wouldn't, except maybe providing an easy interface for PGAs, QFPs, buses,
etc. This is the big thing I want to test; if I need to go out and buy
preprocessors, the inverse assemblers are less appealing to me... but if I
can use the standard pods, it is a lot classier than manually keying in a
symbol table...
If I get a copy, I'll report back with my findings :)
Best,
Sean
On Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 2:10 PM, Marc Verdiell <marc.verdiell at gmail.com>
wrote:
Thanks so much Glen. Indeed, I found the INVASM.ZIP in
the HP16500 folder
https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/hp_agilent_equipment/files/HP16500%20Ser
ies/
Will this work also for the 1670G? No HP-IB inverse assembler in there, so
your diskette copy would still be very valuable.
Is the 1670G still using LIF or does it read DOS format?
Marc
There is INVASM.ZIP in the files section of the
HP/Agilent Test
Equipment group.