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I have made my Backplane 4 available on GitHub
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I am in the process of designing an active backplane (5 slot + expansion), with MP1584 step-down converter, TL7705 supervisor chip and CH340E USB-Serial converter and mini USB connector. A project for my own needs, so I used SMD components. Also I will use a barrel connector 2.1/5.5 for the power supply and I intend to use it in a different colour (yellow, red?) to distinguish it from the 5V system.
8:37 AM, Thursday, April 18th, 2024
Re: [retro-comp] New 68008 SBC for the S-100 / S100 Bus
Bill -
I am beginning a new SBC for the S-100 / S100 Bus. We've had the
JAIR 8080 SBC from Canadian Josh Bensadon, (sp?) See his board here:
http://www.s100computers.com/My%20System%20Pages/8080%20CPU%20Board/8080%20CPU%20Board.htm
and we've also had the Z80 SBC from John Monahan (sp?) here:
http://www.s100computers.com/My%20System%20Pages/SBC%20Z80%20Board/SBC%20Z80%20CPU%20Board.htm
And John also recently added the Z180 SBC S100 Board based on a design by Steve Cousins here:
http://www.s100computers.com/My%20System%20Pages/Z180%20SBC/Z180%20SBC.htm
And these are all great options for the whole 8080 / Z80 enthusiasts, but I've long been
interested in owning a 68000-based computer. In College, about 1981 to 1983, (about 40
years ago when I was in my early 20's), I was lucky enough to be able to work on a
68000-based SAGE IV Computer at my T.E.S.C. College in Olympia, Washington, USA.
The SAGE IV was in their College Computer lab. The SAGE IV info from wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sage_Computer_Technology
and from http://www.oldcomputers.net/sage-iv.html
The SAGE IV was one of 2 computers in the lab running the UCSD Pascal P-System. The
second computer was an Apple II. I was able to setup a 2-way communication between the 2
computers over an RS-232 cable. This allowed the transfer of Pascal Program Listings
between the two machines. The 6502-based Apple II needed to link with some Assembly
Language Code whereas the 68000 didn't even blink. Zoom --> Done ! The 68000 SAGE
was like one of my best dreams come true !! :-) I've Always wanted one of my own ever
since then. :-)
The biggest reason for using the 8-bits data bus of the 68008 for an S100 SBC is half the RAM
chips and half the EPROMS. And the 68008 CPU itself is also a physically smaller DIP chip than
the 16-bits HUGE 68000 DIP. Looks like an Aircraft Carrier !! My hope is to gain enough empty
board space on the S100 prototype card to allow squeezing in either a 68B50 UART (24 pins) or
a (40-pins) DUART like the MC68681 chip or it's equivalent chip from other companies. Use this
for Console IO aka Console: and a Second UART could be used for other things like an
Uplink / Downlink to / from a "Host" PC. Transfer programs and data.
The 68000 S100 CPU card we have right now just does NOT have enough room for a UART.
I'm hoping that the 68008 - with a physically smaller CPU and half as many Memory chips - will
leave me enough room on the S100 prototype board to install either - 1. A single 24-pins DIP 68B50 UART
or 2. A larger 40-pins DIP DUART like the MC68681 (or equivalent) 40-pins DIP. Kind of Shoe-Horn it in there.
Clearly there will also need to be room for an oscillator for the baud rate clock as well. For RAM, use the
Alliance Memory AS6C4008-55PCN Static RAM 512k x 8-bit. And an EPROM or EEPROM as needed up to
512k x 8-bit. Or Flash. To gain more address lines, I am considering mounting the 52-Pins PLCC 68008 CPU
into an adapter to provide 52-pins DIP to use in a WireWrap socket. Getting 4 more address lines will help
this card to be more useful for all the other cards in the S100 system. And provide more memory-mapped IO.
And Lastly, credit to whom it is due, Australian Damian Wildie has been VERY helpful to me so far
and I am Truly Deeply Grateful. :-) Not everyone is willing to converse with a "newbie" like myself.
Harry S. Speer
cc: self
MCP130 - or - DS1233 - or - TI TL7705A
============================================
On 4/18/24 04:36, Bill Shen wrote:
Harry,I use MCP130 for all of my projects. It’s only advantage is cheap, about 1/5th of DS1233.
What 68k project are you working on?Bill
On Thursday, April 18, 2024 at 12:15:46 AM UTC-6 h.s....@gmail.com wrote:
Re: TI TL7705A - versus - Analog Devices / Maxim Integrated DS1233-5+Wednesday, April 17th, 2024 @ 10:46 PM
An open question to those of you who have a Lot of experience in design and construction of boards, including,
but not limited to, Steve Cousins and Tadeusz Pycio but also to any of you who have done this a Lot.
Hello to Steve Cousins, Tadeusz Pycio, and others, I am beginning a project, a mc68k SBC, part of which uses
a Power Supervisor Chip for Power-On Reset. I cannot decide between the 1. TI TL7705A - versus the - 2. Analog
Devices / Maxim Integrated DS1233-5+ --- and I do not have experience with either of them. Can any of you give
me some feedback on Which you would prefer to use and Why ?? Or a recommendation of anything related ??
I would very much like to use one of them on this prototype board, and, in addition, I plan to put in a debounced
RESET push-button momentary switch. I'm using an mc68k Family CPU Chip so these /RESET signals will be buffered
by Open Collector Drivers with Pull-Ups. /RESET and /HALT being both Inputs to the 68k CPU but them also being
outputs from the CPU some of the time. I've seen the debounced push-button momentary feeding into a 555 timer
as a one-shot which looks to me like a very good idea also. But I lack the experience that might help me to decide
between these 2 "Power Managers" options. As I will be starting with Wire-Wrap, I am currently leaning towards
the TI TL7705A chip as it mounts into an 8-Pins DIP package, well-suited to Wire-Wrap Sockets.
Please excuse the Very Large Bolded font but my eyesight is very poor.
So Thanks in Advance,Harry S. Speer
On Friday, March 17, 2023 at 6:06:20 AM UTC-7 Tadeusz Pycio wrote:
I am in the process of designing an active backplane (5 slot + expansion), with MP1584 step-down converter, TL7705
supervisor chip and CH340E USB-Serial converter and mini USB connector. A project for my own needs, so I used SMD
components. Also I will use a barrel connector 2.1/5.5 for the power supply and I intend to use it in a different colour
(yellow, red?) to distinguish it from the 5V system.
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17:12, 5:12 PM, Thursday,
April 18th, 2024
Re: SBC Sources of RESET -
Momentary Push-Button -and- Power-Supervisor Power-On /RESET
Tadeusz -
Regarding 2 separate sources of /RESET - Momentary Push-Button -and- Power-Supervisor
chip Power-On /RESET - in this
case, the outputs of each circuit is intended to be an
Open-Collector
driver like 7407, so it occurred
to me each output could be there and the pair of them driving
the
same pins on the CPU. Wire OR'ed ?? Not sure about that name but either one or both of them
together could be triggering the
same pair of pins on the CPU - /RESET and /HALT - the key
point here being that I want a
nice clean fresh start (so to speak) when the CPU Card powers
up,
and does so automatically, AND I also want a good old "Big Red Switch" to "Kick it in the Head"
when it gets lost due to
"wandering away". ;-) Perhaps this is excessive or overkill
or whatever
but I really do want a nice clean RESET for the 68000 or 68008 CPU Card. The S100 SMB board
from S100Computers.Com here:
http://www.s100computers.com/My%20System%20Pages/SMB%20Board/S100%20Bus%20SMB.htm
By stuffing the S100 SMB Board into the Backplane along with
his 68000 CPU Card, Damian Wildie was able
to remove the /RESET mod he had had to make for his 68000 CPU Card. The Schematic for the SMB board shows
the U29 LM555N on the SMB board and I would prefer it to be on the CPU card itself. My whole goal with the
SBC is the same as John Monahan addressed on his website
S100 website - Make this a "Beginner's Board"
Or call it "The First Card for Newbies". ;-) It
Contains CPU, RAM, EPROM, and Serial IO for " Console: " and,
if there is still any "free" available board space after that, maybe add a CF Card or an SD Card as a "pretend"
A: Boot Drive for CPM-68k. Right now, we have the 68000
CPU card, which requires a separate Serial IO Card,
and we have the 68030 Card, which likewise is dependent on resources only available from other cards elsewhere
on the Bus. The goal is for the Newbie to only have to
debug ONE Card and once She / He gets it going right,
THEN they can use that card as a stable base to work from.
We already had this for the 8080 and Z80 and Z180
But this is the "Beginners' Choice" that didn't exist. So
naturally I want to build one. However, in parallel with the
SBC, I also still want to work on bringing up the 68000 CPU Card we have now, to make sure that I have "Problem
Solved" by providing the same kind of "stable reset" that
the SMB provides. And I have NO Source for the
/RESET on my Motherboard / Backplane right now. I need
something to connect that front-panel RESET switch
to. Don't get me wrong - the SMB Board is a great board
which provides a TON of great resources, but, For Right Now,
I just want and need a nice solid stable source for the
S100 /RESET for the Backplane. The theory is that the 68000
CPU card and the 68030 CPU Card will "pick this up" off of
the /RESET on the Backplane. Is that a Correct Assumption ???
It Seems like there's an echo in here. ;-) Please forgive me repeating things over and over again. It's a "birth
defect".
My Very Deepest Thanks to all of you who responded with
info about your various choices for Reset, for Power
Supervisors, etc. That Gives me a LOT to work with. I am
VERY Grateful !!! I think I am still leaning towards a
DIP Package chip however that may change when I get a
prototype circuit to display on an O'scope. :-)
Thanks Again,
Harry
P.S. Tadeusz - Could you please expand on what you meant by " I am in favour of separating the
RESET button from the RESET line
" ??? I want to make sure that I understand your meaning.
cc: Retro-Comp Google Group and S100 Google Group and self
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