On 7/2/20 2:50 PM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
Hi

On Jul 2, 2020, at 5:30 PM, jimlux <[email protected]> wrote:

On 7/2/20 11:37 AM, ed breya wrote:
It's been fun reminiscing about all these dividers and techniques, but getting back to 
the OP, the original search was for a divide by 5 with "low power" and 
operation from 5 to possibly 3.3V, and clocking properly at 50 MHz. One would assume also 
minimal size and complexity, and low cost.

You forgot to add rad-hard.. I was the OP - This has been a fascinating thing - 
we have a breadboard that uses a fancy clock distribution chip that consumes 
close to a watt (and has too much jitter, as well)..

3) It's hard to even find programmable logic that is simple and small. All the 
mfrs tout their latest tiny parts with *only half a million gates* (I 
exaggerate, but you get the picture)

If they want to sell you a fully self contained "million gate" device for a 
couple bucks, is that really
a bad thing?  Sure, if it’s in a thousand pin BGA, it’s a bad thing. If it’s in a 
< 40 pin package that
you can get on a small board …. maybe not so much.

yes, if it's in a small pinout package. One other peculiarity that I've been burned by is that a lot of the modern devices with large logic and few I/O pins have power dissipations that are clock rate independent for the internal logic - it's the leakage current that dominates and that's VERY dependent on die temp.


I think though, that the marketplace is driving towards increased functionality on one chip, with bigger die size. Those of us who want 50 gates at medium or low speed are distinctly in the minority.


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