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**Quote style:
To avoid thousands of quote marks and colliding with quote marks in
the text, I have used a modified quotation style. Anything in a
section titled "Info:" or "Features:" is a quote from a datasheet
unless otherwised stated in that section. In these sections anything
inside [] is an annotation and not part of the datasheet unless
otherwise stated in that section.
Under any other section, the text is my own unless indicated with "".
Also this document does not contain the entire datasheet for each
chip, usually only the first few pages are included to give an outline
of it. Some datasheets are 100s of pages other are only 1.
**Cant find a chip?...
**Why this document is not GPL or a wiki...
**Definition of a chip set:...
**'chip set', 'chip-set' or 'chipset'?...
**What's not included:...
**Who made the first chip set?...
**Spelling errors/mistyped words...
**Info needed on:...
**A note on VESA support of 486 chipsets....
**Datasheets:...
*_IBM...
*ACC Micro...
*ALD...
*ALi...
*AMD . . . . . . . [no datasheets, some info]...
*Chips & Technologies...
*Contaq . . . . . [no datasheets, some info]...
*Efar Microsystems [no datasheets, some info]...
*ETEQ...
*Faraday...
*Forex . . . . . . [List only, no datasheets found]...
*Intel...
**800 series
***810 (Whitney) 04/26/99...
***810L (Whitney) 04/26/99...
***810-DC100 (Whitney) 04/26/99...
***810e (Whitney) 09/27/99...
***810e2 (Whitney) 01/03/01...
***815 (Solano) 06/19/00...
***815e (Solano-2) 06/19/00...
***815em (Solano-?) 10/23/00...
***815ep (Solano-3) c:Nov'00...
***815p (Solano-3) c:Mar'01...
***815g (Solano-3) c:Sep'01...
***815eg (Solano-3) c:Sep'01...
***820 (Camino) 11/15/99...
***820e (Camino-2) 06/05/00...
***830M (Almador) 07/30/01...
***830MP (Almador) 07/30/01...
***830MG (Almador) 07/30/01...
***840 (Carmel) 10/25/99...
***845 (Brookdale) 09/10/01...
***845MP (Brookdale-M) 03/04/02...
***845MZ (Brookdale-M) 03/04/02...
***845E (Brookdale-E) 05/20/02...
***845G (Brookdale-G) 05/20/02...
***845GL (Brookdale-GL) 05/20/02...
***845GE (Brookdale-GE) 10/07/02...
***845PE (Brookdale-PE) 10/07/02...
***845GV (Brookdale-GV) 10/07/02...
***848P (Breeds Hill) c:Aug'03...
***850 (Tehama) 11/20/00...
***850E (Tehama-E) 05/06/02...
***852GM (Montara-GM) 01/14/03...
***852GMV (Montara-GM) ???...
***852PM (Montara-GM) 06/11/03...
***852GME (Montara-GM) 06/11/03...
***854 (?) 04/11/05...
***855GM (Montara-GM) 03/12/03...
***855GME (Montara-GM) 03/12/03...
***855PM (Odem) 03/12/03...
***860 (Colusa) 05/21/01...
***865G (Springdale) 05/21/03...
***865PE (Springdale-PE) 05/21/03...
***865P (Springdale-P) 05/21/03...
***865GV (Springdale-GV) c:Sep'03...
***875P (Canterwood) 04/14/03...
*Headland/G2...
*HMC (Hulon Microelectronics)...
*Logicstar...
*Motorola...
**IBM AT: MC146818 Real Time Clock <84
***Info:
The MC146818 Real-Time Clock plus RAM is a peripheral device which
includes the unique MOTEL concept for use with various
microprocessors, microcomputers, and larger computers. This part
combines three unique features: a complete time-of-day clock with
alarm and one hundred year calender, a programmable periodic interrupt
and square-wave generator, and 50 bytes of low-power static RAM. The
MC146818 uses high-speed CMOS technology to interface with 1 MHz
processor busses, while consuming very little power.
The Real-Time Clock plus RAM has two distinct uses. First, it is
designed as a battery powered CMOS part (in an otherwise NMOS/TTL
system) including all the common battery backed-up functions such as
RAM, time, and calendar. Secondly, the MC146818 may be used with a
CMOS microprocessor to relieve the software of the timekeeping
workload and to extend the available RAM of an MPU such as the
MC146805E2
***Versions:...
***Features:
o Low-Power, High-Speed, High-Density CMOS
o Internal Time Base and Oscillator
o Counts Seconds, Minutes, and Hours of the Day
o Counts Days of the Week, Date, Month, and Year
o 3 V to 6 V Operation
o Time Base Input Options: 4.194304 MHz, 1.048576 MHz, or 32,768 kHz
o Time Base Oscillator for Parallel Resonant Crystals
o 40 to 200 uW Typical Operating Power at Low Frequency Time Base
o 4.0 to 20 mW Typical Operating Power at High Frequency Time Base
o Binary or BCD Representation of Time, Calendar, and Alarm
o 12- or 24-Hour Clock with AM and PM in 12-Hour Mode
o Daylight Savings Time Option
o Automatic End of Month Recognition
o Automatic Leap Year Compensation
o Microprocessor Bus Compatible [this means absolutely nothing]
o MOTEL Circuit for Bus Univerality
o Multiplexed Bus for Pin Efficiency
o Interfaced with Software as 64 RAM Locations
o 14 Bytes of Clock and Control Registers
o 50 Bytes of General Purpose RAM
o Status Bit Indicates Data Integrity
o Bus Compatible Interrupt Signals (IRQ)
o Three Interrupts are Separately Software Maskable and Testable
Time-of-Day Alarm, Once-per-Second to Once-per-Day
Periodic Rates from 30.5 us to 500 ms
End-of-Clock Update Cycle
o Programmable Square-Wave Output Signal
o Clock Output May Be Used as Microprocessor Clock Input
At Time Base Frequency /1 or /4
o 24-Pin Dual-In-Line Package
*OPTi...
*PC CHIPS/Amptron/Atrend/ECS/Elpina/etc...
*SIS...
*Symphony...
*TI (Texas Instruments)...
*UMC...
*Unresearched:...
*VIA...
*VLSI...
*Western Digital...
*Winbond...
*ZyMOS...
*General Sources:...
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