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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.misc,comp.sys.amiga.hardware
- Path: magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!csn!ub!dsinc!scala!news
- From: dave.haynie@scala.com (Dave Haynie)
- Subject: Re: 030 with no Fast RAM slower than a 020?
- Sender: news@scala.scala.com (Usenet administrator)
- Message-ID: <1996Jan23.225654.11337@scala.scala.com>
- Date: Tue, 23 Jan 1996 22:56:54 GMT
- Reply-To: dave.haynie@scala.com (Dave Haynie)
- References: <4dqfiu$aoi@idefix.eunet.fi>
- Nntp-Posting-Host: gator
- Organization: Scala Computer Television, US Research Center
-
- In <4dqfiu$aoi@idefix.eunet.fi>, siren@dns.mikrobitti.fi (Janne Siren) writes:
- >I just had the opportunity to test Viper '030 28 MHz. I used it with a 4 MB
- >SIMM, but for testing purposes I removed the SIMM and made some speed
- >tests. The A1200 was, according to the test results, actually slower with the
- >28 MHz accelerator (without mem) than it is without an accelerator or memory
- >card. How is this possible?
-
- It's pretty much what you'd expect, but it probably does need some
- explanation.
-
- In order to talk to Chip RAM, the '030 accelerator must sync-up to the
- Chip bus, which is clocked independently from it (don't let the
- "28MHz" fool you, there's no way to reliably take a 28MHz clock tap
- from the Amiga custom chip subystem, feed it to a CPU, and keep that
- CPU in a perfect known synchronization to the chip bus). This
- synchronization delay causes the 28MHz CPU (any one, it's not a
- special feature of the '030) to access Chip RAM slower than the 14MHz
- internal processor does. The amount of delay depends on the
- accelerator's design.
-
- Now, sure, the '030 is still running at 28MHz, and internal operations
- will be faster. You can probably find a few CPU-intensive benchmarks
- that show this. Anything that stays long enough in the instruction
- cache will keep the speed up. Data cache, unfortunately, can't be used
- on chip RAM. Once you add Fast RAM, you get memory better tuned to the
- '030's bus speed. It may support burst cache access, and it definitely
- support data caching.
-
- Dave Haynie | ex-Commodore Engineering | for DiskSalv 3 &
- Sr. Systems Engineer | Hardwired Media Company | "The Deathbed Vigil"
- Scala Inc., US R&D | Ki No Kawa Aikido | info@iam.com
-
- "Feeling ... Pretty ... Psyched" -R.E.M.
-
-