Great!
I'd love to get 3x of each board if someone does a production run. I have
this box of old 386s laying around for 20 years now...

Fabio
On May 29, 2014 6:58 AM, "monahanz" <[email protected]> wrote:

> Well it looks like it's finally done. After some 6 prototype boards and
> one year later it looks like we now have a completely functional S100 bus
> 80386 board.   This board runs on a 21 slot motherboard at 9MHz for all
> interrupts, I/O ports and RAM from 0 to 16MB.  For the remaining RAM (up to
> 4GB for the 80386) the CPU runs at 36MHz (in pipeline protected mode) and
> 32 bits wide via two above board cable connectors.
>
> A complete description of the board can be found here:-
>
> http://s100computers.com/My%20System%20Pages/80386%20Board/80386%20CPU%20Board.htm
>
> There is also a short video of the board in operation towards the bottom
> of the page.
>
> A major component of this effort was writing the 80386 monitor.  It's in
> fact surprising how little example code there is out the demonstrating the
> setting up the 80386 to switch from real to protected mode.   This is
> written up here:-
>
> http://s100computers.com/Software%20Folder/80386%20Monitor/80386%20Monitor.htm
>
> The board currently works with two static RAM boards that sit in the bus
> but communicate directly (and only) with the 80386. The capacity of these
> boards are 8 and 32 MB's. These are described here:-
>
>
> http://s100computers.com/My%20System%20Pages/80386%20-%208MG%20RAM%20Board/8MG%20Static%20RAM%20Board.htm
>
> http://s100computers.com/My%20System%20Pages/80386%20-%2032MG%20RAM%20Board/32MG%20Static%20RAM%20Board.htm
>
> A big thanks goes out to Andrew Lynch at N8VEM (
> http://n8vem-sbc.pbworks.com/w/page/4200908/FrontPage) for laying out the
> many prototypes these boards took.  Thanks Andrew.
>
> I will be ordering a few "commercial quality" boards for myself.   If
> anybody else would like one of these boards they can let me know.  *However
> be aware that these boards are not only complex but expensive to build*.
> The boards themselves are the smallest part of the whole equation.  The 8MB
> static RAM board is a rock solid board and great for testing out the
> hardware and software but those Alliance Memory Inc.  512x8 static RAM
> chips cost about $20 each.   The 32MB board on the other hand has 4 times
> the capacity for about the same price but uses SMD chips.
>
> Next up is an 80486 board and the real challenge a 4GB DRAM board!
>
> Enjoy
> John Monahan
>
>
>
>
>
>
> .
>
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