HV Rescue Shield restores bricked AVRs

Technology
HV Rescue Shield restores bricked AVRs
hv_rescue_shield_v2.jpg

If you’ve got a pile of bricked AVR parts sitting around, or have a penchant for inadvertently blowing the wrong fuses on your devices, then you might want to check out Jeff Keyzer’s HV Rescue Shield. The basic idea is that there are certain blocks of memory (fuses) on the microcontroller that control how it starts up, which can’t be erased by a standard programmer. Instead, you need a device capable of generating a high enough voltage to clear them generating a high-voltage signal to put the chip into a special programming mode, so that they can safely be re-programmed to correct vales.

Jeff’s solution was to create an shield for the Arduino, which has a builtin DC-DC converter that generates the 12V signal necessary to reprogram AVR chips. The whole project is open source, and schematic and code can be found at the project website.

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4 thoughts on “HV Rescue Shield restores bricked AVRs

  1. pat.mkii.org says:

    Just an FYI: It’s not that some of the bits require more voltage to be flipped, it’s that some of the fuse bits can prevent other programming techniques from working. Such as re-purposing the reset pin or turning on the external clock when there isn’t one. All the hv programming does is put the micro in a special mode.

    1. Matt Mets says:

      Good call- I’ll fix the article :-)

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