SP0256A-AL2 speech synthesizer chips: Genuine vs Counterfeit.

All I wanted to do was build a speech synthesizer…

To make a long story short, I’ve ordered chips from three difference China eBay sellers, and have received three different sets of chips that don’t work right.

The first set of bad chips

Here’s the first one:

Bad SP0256A-AL2

This one actually turned out to be an SP0256A-012. The -AL2 version of the chip is programmed with phonemes and is capable of synthesizing any word in the English language (maybe other languages too). The -012 is programmed with a fixed vocabulary for the Mattel Intelovision game console and has the phrase “Mattel Electronics Presents” as well as a bunch of digits (“one”, “two”, … “thirty”, “forty”, …). It might be handy for something like a clock, but is pretty much useless for any other purpose.

Interestingly, the back size has an 012 faintly visible:

SP0256A-AL2, bad chip, back side

I’m not sure exactly what happened, whether GI actually made these chips with the wrong print on them, or whether they were printed correctly and some entrepreneur figured he could make more money by reprinting them.

The second set of bad chips

I decided to order more (Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me). This time I chose a different seller, with chips that had a different manufacturer printed on them. Here’s a picture:

SP0256A-AL2, bad chip number 2

Unlike the previous ones, these ones don’t output any speech at all. There is some noise that comes out of the output pin, and that noise varies according to what is on the address and data buses, even when the chip select input is not triggered. So it kinda makes annoying noise all the time.  It also glitched my RC2014 so that it wouldn’t run (probably by outputting signals to the address, data, or control buses).

I suspect these are just some random 28-pin IC that someone reprinted. I suppose it would be an interested exercise to apply to signals to the fake chips and use a logic analyzer to try to figure out what it’s actually doing, and determine that the chips actually are.

The third set of bad chips

These ones appear similar to the second set. Same manufacturer marking (“Microchip”). The second line is 11263UK instead of 1204CAA. I’m not sure if that’s supposed to be a date code, or something else. Maybe someone who knows can let me know.

In addition to generating weird noises instead of speech and glitching my RC2014 so that it wouldn’t work, merely plugging the cursed IC in seemed to damage two MC68B50 serial IO chips that I had in an adjacent slot on the RC2014. They’re just kinda wonky now. I suspect the fake SP0256-AL2 and the MC68B50 put conflicting outputs on the data bus at the same time, and this caused damage to the MC68B50. Maybe it damaged the fake SP0256A-AL2 as well. Who knows.

The fourth set: GOOD CHIPS!

I’ve purchased yet another set of chips, this time from a US seller who has a reputation for selling quality non-counterfeit speech chips. Here’s a picture of this batch:

SP0256A-AL2, real non-counterfeit, non-fake, working chip!

SP0256A-AL2, genuine, back side

The good chips came from www.speechchips.com, and were priced at about thirty bucks each. I’ve tested them out in my RC2014 using my speech synthesizer board (blog post to follow soon) and they work fine, synthesizing the phonemes as expected.

It’s cool to finally have some good ones, and finally be able to complete my project.

Comments (6)

  1. Ron Pool says:

    speechchips.com is out of these at this time, but I’ve found some at http://sciencestore.co.uk/acatalog/Electronics.html . Here’s hoping the sciencestore chips are the real thing. 🙂

  2. David McMurray says:

    Anyone found another supplier of genuine versions? I have a microchip branded one with 1402CAA which is the Mattel 012 variant.

  3. admin says:

    A year or two ago there was someone on eBay selling tubes of 25 ICs. I wish I’d have stocked up. I’d suggest taking a look at some of the eBay auctions that include a crystal under the assumption that if someone is selling chip + crystal then maybe they actually know what they’re doing. You might want to keep an active search on eBay for 276-1784, the radio shack part number, a couple times a year I see one come up in the original packaging, with datasheet and all.

  4. Scott McDonnell says:

    Scott, I assume you have probably come across this already, but the ROM for the AL2 pattern has been dumped and supposedly this ROM can be used with these SPO256-012, etc.. chips.

    http://spatula-city.org/~im14u2c/sp0256-al2/

    Good to know when the source for the AL2 version completely dries up.

  5. Bert Hoogenboom says:

    Has somebody already tryed to make a atmega664 to do the same as this chip. you just need en way to find out whats is the prom for what phonemes. roms where not that big in 1981. I think it will fit in something like atmega664 or atmega2560.

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