[sane-devel] Plustek Scanfx /w Proprietary ISA card
Gerhard Jaeger
gerhard@gjaeger.de
Sat, 1 Jan 2005 18:02:04 +0100
Hi Fred,
On Friday 31 December 2004 22:29, Fred Stevens wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I have a Scanfx with an ISA adapter card. The card is mapped to a
> jumper selectable range of addresses (0x220,230,260,270,320,330,360,370)
> and IRQ settings(3,4,5,10,11,12). After looking at the card, I
> determined that it is similar to a parallel port with the exception that
> the data bus is bi-directional. There are only a handful of LSttl chips
> (74LS245, 74LS244, 74LS86, 74LS74, 74LS174 and a 16?? pal) and one PAL
> on the board so it can't be doing too much. The address range of the
> card is four bytes (I think) and they are mirrored in the next four
> bytes since address line A2 isn't connected on the card edge. The A0
> and A1 lines are connected, as well as A3 through A9. Nothing above
> that along with ~iow and ~ior only being used from the ISA bus. IRQs
> 3,4,5,10,11,12 are connected and are jumper selectable. The connector
> attached to the cardis a high density 25 pin Dsub style. In the scanner
> unit the LSI thatis connected to the interface (normal 25 Dsub on the
> scanner side) is a Plustek 92001. I am going to do some more hardware
> debugging to see what the card does when I have some time.
>
> Is this information useful to anyone? The scanner is a paperweight to
> me unless I can use it under Linux since I stay away from that other
> operating system for intel platforms. Even so, the drivers available
> for Win95/98 aren't very good. My dad gave me the unit when he was done
> using it under Win98 for that reason. It's rather well made though and
> could be useful attached to my print server.
the description is more or less useless, because you need to know how this
ASIC works. I think its a predecessor of the 96001 ASIC, which is used in
later Plustek parallelport scanner and supported by the plustek_pp backend.
As this ASIC if pretty old, I don't have any technical documentation on that.
Ciao,
Gerhard