There is some documentation for the i80130 in the iRMX databooks (see:
https://bitsavers.org/pdf/intel/iRMX/).  There's additional info in the
Intel 8086 developers manuals of the time, as well as the multibus boards
that used it (iSBC86/30?).  As I understand it, it doesn't have *all* of
iRMX in ROM, so you still need additional software to make a system.  I
have a couple I haven't yet taken time to do anything with.

It is my understanding (probably wrong) that there is debate over
wether the 80150 actually shipped, and if so, did it ship in volume.  I've
never seen one nor know anyone who claims they have, but CP/M-86 isn't my
thing, so I'll leave one of the many experts around here to chime in.  YMMV.

N.B.: If you're shopping, you want the "i80130-2", *not* the "i80130-6" or
"i80130-A".  The former has the iRMX ROM; the latter is ROMless and was
used for the integrated peripherals.  See:
https://www.cpushack.com/2017/03/12/when-intel-runs-out-of-chips/

KJ

On Fri, Jul 3, 2026 at 6:34 AM Holger Veit via cctalk <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Hi all,
>
> Around 1981, Intel made a 8086 companion chip named _operating system
> processor_ (i80130, and i80150, resp.) which comprised a ROM and some
> interrupt logic. The 80130 contained sort of a BIOS for iRMX86, the
> 80150 supported CP/M-86. Few info can be found at
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_80130, and a datasheet exists at
> alldatasheet.com.
> Some lore is also found in some history pages, but not much more than
> the datasheet contains.
>
> Was the ROM content of both chips dumped and is available on the
> Internet somewhere, or does someone have such a system (supposedly some
> iAPX86/30) and is willing to make this public, e.g. upload to bitsavers?
>
> THX to any pointers
>
> Kind Regards
> Holger
>
>
>

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