At 07:31 PM 11/10/00 -0500, you wrote:
>From: Douglas Quebbeman <dhquebbeman_at_theestopinalgroup.com>
>>> An 80_1_86? Really. I guess I was never aware that there was one
>like
>>> that ever made. I always thought they jumped from the 8086 to the
>80286
>>CPU.
>>>
>>> Do you have any stats on this little baby?
The following was taken directly from Intel order# 210451-003, dated
July 1983 and copyright 1983 by Intel Corporation:
+ Integrated Feature Set
- Enhanced 8086-2 CPU
- Clock Generator
- 2 Independent, High-Speed DMA Channels
- Programmable Interrupt Controller
- 3 Programmable 16-bit Timers
- Programmable Memory and Peripheral Chip-select Logic
- Programmable Wait State Generator
- Local Bus Controller
+ Available in 8 MHz (80186) and cost effective 6 MHz (80186-6) versions.
+ High-Performance Processor
- 2 Times the Performance of the Standard iAPX 86
- 4 Mbyte/Sec Bus Bandwidth Interface
+ Direct Addressing Capability to 1 MByte Memory
+ Completely Object Code Compatible with All Existing iAPX 86, 88 Software
- 10 New Instruction Types
+ Optional Numeric Processor Extension
- iAPX 186/20 High-Performance 80-bit Numeric Data Processor
+ The 80186 is housed in a 68-pin, leadless JEDEC type A hermetic chip
carrier and required the IDT 3M Textool 68-pin JEDEC socket.
Obviously, this is just the very tip of the data, as there are many
pages of diagrams and charts in the document that I've not reproduced here.
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Received on Sat Nov 11 2000 - 01:31:40 GMT