Attention 1802 fans...

From: Christopher McNabb <cmcnabb_at_4mcnabb.net>
Date: Mon Sep 30 22:09:01 2002

----- Original Message -----
From: "Jim Kearney" <jim_at_jkearney.com>
>
> It goes beyond that... there is a Silicon-On-Saphire version which is
> considerably more rad-hard than a pure silicon process. In fact even more
> recent space probes like Galileo (launched 1989) used 1802s.
>

According to http://www.amsat.org/amsat/sats/phase3d/ihu.html , AO-40 (which
was launched on Nov 16th, 2000) uses an 1802 as its internal housekeeping
unit. Here is a brief quote from the page: "The P3D IHU is based on a
Sandia-processed (rad hard) CDP1802 COSMAC processor and standard
4000-series CMOS logic operating at a nominal power supply of 10-volts. The
memory array is based on donated GEC Plessey MA9287 rad-hard CMOS static
RAMs, giving a total memory size of 64k bytes. "
Received on Mon Sep 30 2002 - 22:09:01 BST

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