Electronics > FPGA
Replicating a 'custom' 6800 in FPGA
metertech58761:
So, I have this project that I built just to say I built it - a copy of an obscure bit of test equipment from the mid '80s.
Thing is, it uses a CPU that is an industrial 6800 variant (more precisely, it has the 6801 instruction set, yet the pinout is similar to a stock 6800).
It seems the chip I salvaged turned out to be dead... and the only place that even has any left quoted me a price over $50 apiece.
So, I'm curious if anyone has made an FPGA adapter for a 6800-class MPU?
rstofer:
I haven't counted the pins but maybe the Digilent CMOD S6 or A7 can do the job. I suspect there will need to be a carrier board between the project board and the CMOD to straighten out some signal pinouts.
https://digilent.com/shop/boards-and-components/system-boards/cmods/
There's a MC6803/6801 core at OpenCores.org if you need one.
joeqsmith:
Do you have the project documented somewhere (schematics, source, layout...)?
james_s:
There is a 6800 core that I've used in some projects, although it is not cycle accurate, I don't know if that matters to you or not. It is certainly possible to use a FPGA soft core interfaced to original hardware but I don't know if there is a ready to go core that will do exactly what you want.
rstofer:
Voltage levels may be a problem.
Navigation
[0] Message Index
[#] Next page
Go to full version