You mean 74HCT259. The HCT means CMOS but with TTL levels.
In fact....this kept bugging me and to be honest....you're wrong, and I was misled by you

From Wikipedia:
HC – High-speed CMOS, similar performance to LS, 12 ns. 2.0–6.0 V.
HCT – High speed, compatible logic levels to bipolar parts.
...
Many parts in the CMOS HC, AC, and FC families are also offered in "T" versions (HCT, ACT, and FCT) which have input thresholds that are compatible with both TTL and 3.3 V CMOS signals. The non-T parts have conventional CMOS input thresholds.
"
So, HC and HCT are different. Not much, but different.
In my own words:
HC= high speed CMOS, so faster then normal CMOS, but voltage levels still at CMOS levels
HCT = high speed CMOS , faster than normal CMOS _AND_ voltages at TTL level....in other words, they are drop-in replacements for LS.
On Jon's board there are HC's, not HCT. Again, I'm assuming these work.....
My local dealer has 74LS259 @ €1.50 each and 74HCT259 @ €1.00 each...
What I've always understood was that HCT can be used instead of TTL.
Interesting sidenote, the NXP datasheet talks about the 74HC259 and 74HCT259 in "one go".....the key difference they mention are clear:
Input levels:
- For 74HC259: CMOS level
- For 74HCT259: TTL levelhttp://www.nxp.com/documents/data_sheet/74HC_HCT259.pdfAnyway.......I'm picking up a couple of 74HCT259's today
