Not much to say really. I decided it would be a fun challenge to carefully
measure out the M100 sockets and NEC sockets to see if I could have a
single card that spans all 3 (or 4 in the case of NEC) ram slots with a
single ram chip.
It works, and it saves a bit of money if you need a bunch of 8k rams.  Bit
of a pain to make though.  I have to pick apart pin headers to get the
pins, and then hand place 40 pins in a jig, and then wiggle the board into
place and solder.

I have enough M100's that have only 8k, and several NEC with no bank 2 RAM,
I decided to finish the project off,  and flood my machines with ram.
Since then I decided I would offer it if there was interest.
Never was intended to be DIY.
regards.
Steve

On Tue, Apr 25, 2023 at 9:45 PM Mike Stein <mhs.st...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I didn't know there was a 24K RAM card for the M100; any details on that?
>
> m
>
>
> On Tue, Apr 25, 2023 at 9:17 PM Stephen Adolph <twospru...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>>
>> http://bitchin100.com/wiki/index.php?title=Ordering_Information
>>
>> Mark, those 2 items are things you can order from me.
>>
>> Steve
>>
>>
>> On Tuesday, April 25, 2023, mark audacity romberg <mark.romb...@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Say y’all, I don’t have a login on the Bitchin 100 Wiki to comment
>>> there, but both the 8k and 24k DIY RAM board articles have no actual
>>> actionable information—no schematics, no links, no PCB art, nothing but a
>>> photo of the 8k, and a photo of the prototype installed for the 24k.
>>>
>>> Needless to say…these are not useful. Could we either get the folks who
>>> created those projects to post the rest of the information/files, or remove
>>> the articles, since they essentially are stories, not projects?
>>>
>>> —m.a
>>
>>

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