blog:286_shootout_pa286-sa1

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revision Previous revision
Next revision
Previous revision
blog:286_shootout_pa286-sa1 [2021/01/20 08:15] – [Memory Configuration] johnblog:286_shootout_pa286-sa1 [2024/02/16 19:02] (current) – [Conclusion] john
Line 1: Line 1:
 ====== Peaktron / Micro Systems PA286-SA1 ====== ====== Peaktron / Micro Systems PA286-SA1 ======
  
 +{{:blog:img20210115115936.jpg?150|}} 
 +
 +A 286 motherboard that seemed promising. Information on specifications and configuration, as well as benchmarks and testing.
 ===== Initial Thoughts ===== ===== Initial Thoughts =====
  
Line 129: Line 132:
 {{:blog:img20210116091224.jpg?200|}} {{:blog:img20210116093134.jpg?200|}} {{:blog:img20210116093104.jpg?200|}} {{:blog:img20210116091224.jpg?200|}} {{:blog:img20210116093134.jpg?200|}} {{:blog:img20210116093104.jpg?200|}}
  
-==== Oscillator Modification ====+===== Oscillator Modification =====
  
 The board has a soldered-in oscillator of 32MHz, giving a 16MHz processor clock. To do any performance tuning or use a 20MHz or faster processor, it will have to be replaced with a socket: The board has a soldered-in oscillator of 32MHz, giving a 16MHz processor clock. To do any performance tuning or use a 20MHz or faster processor, it will have to be replaced with a socket:
  
-{{:blog:img20210116110901.jpg?200 |}}{{:blog:img20210116121004.jpg?200 |}}{{:blog:img20210116121019.jpg?200 |}} +{{:blog:img20210116110901.jpg?200|}}{{:blog:img20210116121004.jpg?200|}}{{:blog:img20210116121019.jpg?200|}} 
-{{:blog:img20210116121136.jpg?200 |}}{{:blog:img20210116122204.jpg?200 |}}+{{:blog:img20210116121136.jpg?200|}}{{:blog:img20210116122204.jpg?200|}} 
 + 
 +The board works correctly again with the original oscillator in the socket.
 ===== 0 Wait State ===== ===== 0 Wait State =====
  
Line 295: Line 300:
 ===== Conclusion ===== ===== Conclusion =====
  
-This one looked too good to be true: 20MHz support, 16MB RAM support, modern-single-chip chipset, performance options (0-wait state, BIOS shadowing, etc). Unfortunately it simply //was// too good to be true.+This one looked too good to be true: 20MHz support, 16MB RAM support, performance options (0-wait state, BIOS shadowing, etc). Unfortunately it simply //was// too good to be true.
  
 The board is well made, clean and nicely finished... but... it simply can't run reliably with 0-wait state mode enabled; and that is absolutely essential for decent performance. Running in 1-wait state mode with a 16MHz processor speed drops the overall performance to that of a 10 or 12MHz processor (12MHz is being generous). The board is well made, clean and nicely finished... but... it simply can't run reliably with 0-wait state mode enabled; and that is absolutely essential for decent performance. Running in 1-wait state mode with a 16MHz processor speed drops the overall performance to that of a 10 or 12MHz processor (12MHz is being generous).
  • blog/286_shootout_pa286-sa1.1611130524.txt.gz
  • Last modified: 2021/01/20 08:15
  • by john