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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.hardware
- Subject: Re: Summary of IIsi 20->25 MHz upgrade log
- Message-ID: <1992Nov11.224126.192@physc1.byu.edu>
- From: seth@physc1.byu.edu
- Date: 11 Nov 92 22:41:26 -0700
- References: <6647@news.duke.edu> <zbh1mjb@rpi.edu>
- Distribution: world
- Organization: Brigham Young University
- Lines: 32
-
- The fpu on most cards is in fact clocked off the ][si's clock signal, but not
- because it has to be. The 68030 co-processor interface is entirely asynchronous
- and the cpu and any co-processor can be hooked up to whatever clock they want
- to be. The hardware of the co-processor interface takes care of the necessary
- details of the communication. It is perfectly reasonable to think of hooking up
- a 50 MHz fpu to a 50 MHz clock on a card and have it work just fine (and 2 1/2
- times as fast as the fpu normally works with a IIsi.) The main reason that you
- never see 40 or 50 MHz (or anything besides 20 MHz for that matter..) fpu's
- for the IIsi is that they would cost more. Companies are out there to make a
- buck. The amount of people they tgink would buy a card with a faster fpu is
- fairly small, so they don't want to have to go through the trouble of making
- them and having them in stock. The 68882 chips that are rated at 50 MHz are
- much more expensive than 20 MHz chips, so that and the (relatively small) cost
- of adding a clock to the card with the fpu, along with the space that it would
- take up, are the reasons why you just don't see it. I would personall like to
- see someone who has some pc-board experience copy a IIsi pds card with fpu,
- but instead of having the fpu clock-in pin hooked to the IIsi clock signal line
- put a 50 MHz clock signal chip or whatever is needed. I personally don't have
- any of the resources available for doing such a thing, so I can only dream
- about it.
- For those worrying about whether your fpu can handle the increase for
- heat and such from 20 MHz to 25 MHz in "The Upgrade", you can simply buy a
- 68882 chip from a lot of mail order houses that IS rated at 25 MHz for maybe
- $80 or so (just a guess, nobody flame me for having the price wrong.) You
- could probably sell the 20 MHz chip then to someone on the net. I don't know
- anything about the NuBus cards, because I have a PDS card, but for the PDS
- cards I have seen nothing in my reading of technical stuff about the fpu and
- the co-processor interface of the 68030 that would make me think that the fpu
- would not function PERFECTLY well under the increase to 25 MHz.
- Seth Leigh
- BYU Physics Dept.
-
-