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BPM Microsystems announces that it will display its latest Flashstream automated programming technology, the 3000FS, in distributor Adaptsys’ booth F40 at the upcoming National Electronics Week (NEW) 2008 exhibition and conference, scheduled to take place June 17-19, 2008, in Earls Court, London, UK.
Designed specifically to solve excessive programming times in current in-system, JTAG and in-circuit programming production methods, the 3000FS is modeled from the current BPM 3710 handler and contains four Flashstream programming sites. Rated at 1100 devices per hour, the new 3000FS is flexible enough to handle parts in tray, tube or tape for device input or output.
“Combining these two technologies gives the 3000FS automated flash programmer the ability to produce a fully programmed 512Mb NAND Flash memory device every 3.4 seconds or 1100 devices in an hour,” says Tim Nolte, director of global marketing. “Our customers will get the benefit of a robust device handling solution combined with Flashstream’s speed to meet the challenges of large flash memory programming in electronics manufacturing.”
Also on display will be the HelixFS, modeled after the BPM Helix tabletop handling system. Rated at a delivery of 800 devices per hour, the HelixFS gives customers the option to utilize Flashstream sites or purchase and use BPM’s current universal site technology that supports over 28,000 device part numbers. The HelixFS has the ability to switch between the dedicated flash sites and universal sites, to adapt to production needs.
The manual Flashstream as well as the universal device programmers will also be on display with demonstrations of 2Gbit (gigabit) Samsung NAND flash memory device being programmed in 31.1 seconds with a full data pattern.
The Flashstream technology, that was introduced as a manual programming product in April of 2007, offers the fastest flash programming of NAND and NOR flash memory in on market today. This industry leading speed is due to the creation of a proprietary co-processor technology developed by BPM called Vector Engine. This technology uses a proprietary co-processor design to hardware accelerate flash memory waveforms during the programming cycle. Faster speeds are achieved through synchronous operations that eliminate the dead times when the DUT waits on the programmer. The result is programming near the theoretical limits of the silicon design — the faster the device, the faster the device is programmed.
Visit Adaptsys’ stand F40 for more information or for further details on the Flashstream product line, go to http://flashstream.bpmmicro.com
www.bpmmicro.com
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