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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware
- Path: sparky!uunet!think.com!ames!data.nas.nasa.gov!wilbur.nas.nasa.gov!tweten
- From: tweten@wilbur.nas.nasa.gov (Dave Tweten)
- Subject: Does This Port Board Exist?
- Sender: news@nas.nasa.gov (News Administrator)
- Organization: NAS, NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA
- Date: Mon, 16 Nov 92 07:17:00 GMT
- Message-ID: <1992Nov16.071700.25892@nas.nasa.gov>
- Lines: 46
-
- I need some suggestions from the net for a "port" board for my new EISA
- machine. Port provisions on the Micronics motherboard are inadequate.
- These things don't seem to come as "extras" on EISA bus boards either
- (no wonder). Finally, there is one unused slot which can't take an
- EISA master board, so I'd like to fill it with a board described below.
-
- Though my Micronics 486/33 EISA board has motherboard support for two
- COM ports and a parallel port, the COM ports approximate 16450 chips
- and the parallel port is output-only. By contrast, my mythical "port"
- board provides more up-to-date COM, LPT and game port support and is an
- ISA board (that's right - EISA would be severe overkill).
-
- It supports COM1 through COM4, using 16550A chips, and jumpers/switches
- can route interrupts to IRQs 3, 4, 10, 11, 12, 15 or nothing.
-
- It supports LPT1 through LPT3. A jumper/switch per port permits them
- to work PS/2 style: control register bits 5 can be used to tristate the
- data line drivers, permitting parallel input without "dueling drivers."
- Jumpers/switches permit use of IRQs 5, 7, 10, 11, 12, 15 or none.
-
- If more than one COM and/or LPT port is set to use a given IRQ, the IRQ
- line gets the logical OR of the signals (permitting shared interrupts -
- at least on the board). Each COM and LPT port can individually be
- enabled or disabled by jumpers/switches. COM and LPT port board
- connections are headers, so cutouts in current cases can be used. The
- headers are wired so a ribbon cable with an insulation displacement
- header connector on one end and an insulation displacement DB connector
- of the appropriate size on the other end will produce standard pin
- assignments.
-
- Finally, it has a game port, with two female DB-15 connectors wired in
- parallel and located on the board's mounting bracket. One connector is
- wired in the standard way and the other swaps the functions on pins 2-7
- and pins 10-14 (more or less), permitting use of two joysticks without
- a "Y" connector.
-
- So, does my mythical board exist? If so, where can I get it? If not,
- how close do real products come? After considerable looking, I have
- yet to find anything even close. Please e-mail me any responses. If
- there's even mild interest, I'll post a summary of responses after the
- dust settles. Thanks.
- --
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Dave Tweten tweten@nas.nasa.gov
- NASA Ames Research Center, M/S 258-5 (415) 604-4416
- Moffett Field, CA 94035-1000 FAX: (415) 604-4377
-