Free (old!) micro-processor

Gerald Wolczanski jerrywlinux at comcast.net
Fri Mar 29 15:10:14 CDT 2013


It's yours Terry - you were the first.  

Send your your address and I'll mail it to you, free of charge.  How
heavy can it be?

Jerry


On Fri, 2013-03-29 at 15:22 -0400, wb4jfi at knology.net wrote:
> I would like it, but I'm not local in DC.  I have used them in the past.  If 
> you don't get a local interested, could you mail it to me in Charleston, SC? 
> I'll pay the shipping.
> 73 & tnx
> Terry, WB4JFI
> 
> 
> -----Original Message----- 
> From: Gerald Wolczanski
> Sent: Friday, March 29, 2013 3:17 PM
> To: tacos at amrad.org
> Subject: Free (old!) micro-processor
> 
> Sorting out some of my parts and I find a "CDP1802", a 40-pin device.
> Researching I find:
> 
> The RCA 1802 has a static CMOS design with no minimum clock frequency,
> so that it can be run at very low speeds and low power. It has an 8-bit
> parallel bus with a bidirectional data bus and a multiplexed address bus
> (i.e., the high order byte of the 16-bit address and the low order byte
> of the address take turns in using the 8-bit physical address bus lines,
> by accessing the bus lines in different clock cycles).
> 
> The RCA 1802 has a single bit, programmable output port, and four input
> pins which are directly tested by branch instructions.
> 
> Its I/O mode is flexible and programmable, and it has a single-phase
> clock with an on-chip oscillator. Its register set consists of sixteen
> 16-bit registers. The program counter (PC) can reside in any of these,
> providing a simple way to implement multiple PCs, pointers, or
> registers.
> 
> MORE IMPORTANTLY:
> The Galileo spacecraft used multiple 1802 microprocessors
> 
> ANYBODY WANT THIS?
> 
> Jerry
> KI4IO
> Warrenton
> 
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> 




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