Allison: 2910c version of z80 and FPGAs - a little O/T

From: Heinz Wolter <h.wolter_at_sympatico.ca>
Date: Sat May 5 21:35:46 2001

Chuck, interesting you should mention the Burch kit...and
the PDP10 in the same message! I'm using my Burch-
board( a wonderful product at a great price- good work Tony!)
to debug bits and pieces of my KL-10 fpga design. So far I've
only got the 36bit alu, IR, MAR/MDR, CC muxes(the easy parts)
and am reverse engineering the rest from the KS-10 and KL-10
microcode. You can do a lot with even a 200kgate part - the XCS200
I've got Webpack software that Tony ships with the board, as well as a
student version of Foundation from a book, and WARP from
another book to develop with. Major integration and verification
will require a full Foundation or similar software for around 3KUS$.
As a nifty mini-project - it would be nice if a PDP11/40 (the KL-10
front end ) could be made to fit on a Burch board and XC2S200 part.
If you're interested in CPU soft cores for fpga - check out Jan Gray's
excellent site http://www.fpgacpu.org/ . Alphdata in Scotland has a PCI card
with
fast SSRAM and an Xilinx XRC/812E-8 perfect for a KL-10 implementation.
Neil Franklin is also working on squeezing a KA-10 into an XC2S200
(same as on the Burch- using JBits)
Regards,all
Heinz

----- Original Message -----
From: "Chuck McManis" <cmcmanis_at_mcmanis.com>
To: <classiccmp_at_classiccmp.org>
Sent: Saturday, May 05, 2001 3:49 PM
Subject: Re: Allison: 2910c version of z80


> Heinz mentioned the Spartan FPGAs and Allison added:
> >a nice Virtex or Spartan fpga will fit a whole processor
> > >with up to 1mbit or sram on chip.
> >Far more interesting, out of my range of tools to do.
> >Allison
>
> Check again Allison. I've been playing around with a Spartan-II 200K gate
> FPGA that is on a board built by Tony Burch <http://www.burched.com.au>
> (and my experiences with it are here:
> <http://www.mcmanis.com/chuck/robotics/fpga>). The board and some support
> stuff (SRAM, Serial/Kbd/mouse ports, etc) was less than $400 and the
design
> tools are *free*. You do have to take the time to learn VHDL but so far
the
> payoff has been worth it for me. I'm having a blast with this thing. My
> "final" is a PDP-8 w/ Serial terminal (think DECMate in a single chip)
with
> full lights and switches. This chip can do that easily. I don't think it
> can do a KL-10 but it might ...
>
> --Chuck
>
>
>
>
Received on Sat May 05 2001 - 21:35:46 BST

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