Brad Beveridge wrote: > >> I "lost" several NAND chips during my development. I simply hacked the >> FLASH erase utilities to ignore the ignore markers and erase the bad >> blocks anyway until I got everything working and "rescued" the chips. > > > I've done bringup/development work on several boards using different > arrangements of NAND. IMHO, you will "destroy" at least a few chips in > early development by having to erase falsely marked bad blocks, and at > the same time erasing manufacturer marked blocks. I've not noticed any > significant errors by erasing manufacturer bad blocks, and you shouldn't > be too worried about it. That said - I also wouldn't let any of those > "destroyed" chips out into the world in a real product. I got the electronics engineer to make up some imitation Smartmedia cards, with test points and headers for the logic analyser, for me so I could test with our actual NAND chips on my development board. Those pesky chips ain't going anywhere! I guess it's also a good test to see if YAFFS copes with a NAND that has been "tampered" with. :) regards, Aras