Specifications
2–21
Selecting Your Hardware Components
Publication
1747-6.2
You can burn a program into an EEPROM memory module using a
processor that is the same or different from the one used to run the
program. When burning EEPROMs, keep the following conditions
in mind:
• The program size cannot exceed the processor memory size. For
instance, an SLC 5/01 1K processor can burn an EEPROM for a
SLC 5/01 4K processor as long as the program does not exceed
1K.
• The I/O and chassis configuration of the burning processor does
not have to match the I/O configuration of the program being
burned.
• You do not have to enter the Run mode when burning an
EEPROM. If the run mode is entered and the chassis
configuration does not match, a major fault will occur. If you
burn an EEPROM while in the fault mode, the fault will also be
saved in the EEPROM.
The following table summarizes the above conditions as to the type
of processor you can use to burn EEPROMs for other processors.
To burn EEPROMs for these processors:
Use these
processors
SLC
5/01
(1K)
SLC
5/01
(4K)
SLC
5/02
(4K)
SLC
5/03
(8K)
SLC
5/03
(16K)
SLC
5/04
(16K)
SLC
5/04
(32K)
SLC
5/04
(64K)
SLC
5/05
(16K)
SLC
5/05
(32K)
SLC
5/05
(64K)
SLC 5/01 (1K)
•
1K
max.
SLC 5/01 (4K)
1K
max.
•
SLC 5/02 (4K)
•
SLC 5/03 (8K)
•
8K
max.
SLC 5/03 (16K)
8K
max.
•
SLC 5/04 (16K)
•
16K
max.
16K max.
SLC 5/04 (32K)
16K
max.
•
32K max.
SLC 5/04 (64K)
16K
max.
32K max.
•
SLC 5/05 (16K)
•
16K
max.
16K max.
SLC 5/05 (32K)
16K
max.
•
32K max.
SLC 5/05 (64K)
16K
max.
32K max.
•
• valid combination
EEPROM Burning Options