Hi John,
 
I've got some 1uf Tants here so I'll use them in positions C51 & C74 taking 
care to observe polarity etc...
wrt the LM323k on the 80386 board I managed to get a genuine LM323K device 
from Farnell UK for UK £20 (ouch!!) though stock numbers are dwindling even 
at that price.
I did try the ebay route and paid UK £6 for one and surprise, surprise it 
turned out to be fake (Ov output), I did get a full refund when I 
challenged the seller.
 
My genuine LM323K from Farnell outputs 4.95V under no load test which is 
fine by me.
 
The LM2576 switching regulator that you mention I have not used myself but 
would be perfect for the 80486 board and beyond, using the adjustable 
version will give the flexibility to cater for various different 486 core 
voltages using a jumpered approach like on a true 80486 motherboard, whilst 
minimising heat build up.
 
If you remember, some time ago I mentioned the AMD 5x86 P75 chip which was 
the fastest 80486-like processor produced and fully 486DX2 compatible, this 
one runs on a 3.45v supply at a supply current of 950mA approx (at 133Mhz, 
4 x 33), based on conventional linear regulator technology you would 
already need to dissipate 4.3W at the regulator before you start adding the 
surrounding support chips (8v - 3.45v * 0.95A), a switcher regulator is the 
way to go !!.
 
Out of interest what is your initial target 486 chip version ?? (DX2-66 or 
otherwise)
 
The 32MB SMD on board SRAM board looks neat but would be some way down the 
line for me, way too many things to get sorted before then, but I 
appreciate the insight on what is coming down the line from your workshop, 
very interesting stuff :-)
 
Best Regards
 
David Fry
 
 
 
 
On Friday, October 31, 2014 9:37:28 PM UTC, David Fry wrote:

>  Hi John,
>  
> I am slowly starting to populate my 80386 PCB with capacitors and have a 
> query regarding C51 and C74 (positioned either side of the 80386 CPU).
> The schematic would suggest that these are 0.1uF multilayer ceramic 
> capacitors like the rest, but the pictures on most versions of your 80386 
> boards would seem to indicate you have used a tantalum bead capacitor in 
> these two positions.
>  
> Please can you clarify what type & value of capacitor should be used here.
>  
> regards and thanks
>  
> David Fry
>

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