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- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!rutgers!cbmvax!daveh
- From: daveh@cbmvax.commodore.com (Dave Haynie)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.hardware
- Subject: Re: Beginner A3000 questions on hardware
- Message-ID: <34953@cbmvax.commodore.com>
- Date: 9 Sep 92 18:52:29 GMT
- References: <Bu9qLz.6x2@wpi.WPI.EDU>
- Reply-To: daveh@cbmvax.commodore.com (Dave Haynie)
- Distribution: usa
- Organization: Commodore, West Chester, PA
- Lines: 59
-
- In article <Bu9qLz.6x2@wpi.WPI.EDU> jayscott@wpi.WPI.EDU (Jason Scott Anderson) writes:
-
- > I had a few questions...There are some new VLSI chips I am unfamiliar with:
- >Gary is now mounted differently, I am assuming to accomodate SCSI control..?
-
- The Fat Gary in the A3000 is a totally different gate array than the Gary used
- in A500/A2000 systems (we just kept the name, since everyone knew that "Gary"
- = "motherboard controller"). The A3000 Gary isn't involved in hard disk DMA,
- it's larger simply because it has more work to do (requiriring more signals)
- than the A2000's Gary. This work includes basic chip select support for the
- 8520s, SCSI controller, Amiga chips, etc.
-
- >There is a chip called RAMSEY near the RAM expansion, which I assume is to
- >contorl RAM access requests..?
-
- RAMSEY in indeed a gate array for DRAM control. It also supplies the addresses
- during a SCSI DMA operation.
-
- >There is also a VLSI chip which says DMAC on it, I'm guessing for DMA control..?
-
- This is the DMA controller for SCSI transfers. It connects to the A3000 data
- bus on one side, the WD33C93A SCSI controller on the other side. It funnels
- up SCSI data at SCSI speeds via FIFO, and sends this out on the A3000 bus at
- full A3000 local bus speeds, 32-bits at a time.
-
- > Also, by the ZIP sockets for expansion, there looks like room for about 8
- >DRAM chips - what goes there? Anything?
-
- There is room for 32 ZIP DRAMs, which will be 4MB using 256K x 4 parts or 16MB
- using 1MB x 4 parts.
-
- >Also, the Kickstart ROM is contained on 2 chips instead of 1...why was this
- >done? (Guess: uncertain as to the final size of the ROM, explaining the room
- >for 2 more ROM chips next to those.)
-
- Nope. The ROMs are 16-bits wide, we wanted KickStart to be 32-bits wide.
- So it takes two ROMs. The second set is there because when we started the
- A3000 project, no one made an EPROM in the same package as the JEDEC standard
- ROM (Intel finally came around and produced an EPROM in a standard package,
- so we dropped the second set of sockets on the A3000T).
-
- >CPU and FPU were surface-mounted (cute), but the big $20,000 question is: what
- >is the long expansion slot near the edge of the motherboard labeled "Fast Bus"
- >or something like that?
-
- That's the A3000's Coprocessor slot. You generally put 68040 processor cards
- there. Developers may also connect logic analyzers there (its much easier to
- plug in a logic analyzer card than to attempt to clamp onto the surface mount
- 68030).
-
- >It's a connector I'm very unfamiliar with...
-
- That's what we call the "KEL from Hell" connector, it's a 200 pin fine pitch
- connector giving access to practically every signal on the A3000 local bus.
-
- --
- Dave Haynie Commodore-Amiga (Amiga 3000) "The Crew That Never Rests"
- {uunet|pyramid|rutgers}!cbmvax!daveh BIX: hazy
- "Work like a horse, drink like a fish" - Psychefunkapus
-