U80701
32-bit microprocessor developed in the German Democratic Republic
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![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/cd/KL_MME_U80701.jpg/200px-KL_MME_U80701.jpg)
The U80701 is a 32-bit microprocessor developed from 1986-1990 in the German Democratic Republic. It was manufactured by VEB Mikroelektronik "Karl Marx" Erfurt (MME) in NMOS technology and is encased in a ceramic quad flat package (CQFP-68 package).[1]
Microprocessor
The U80701 was developed by reverse engineering the MicroVAX 78032 microprocessor of the Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC). It is used in the Robotron K 1820 minicomputer - a clone of the DEC MicroVAX II.[2]
The U80700 system includes the following chips:
- U80701: CPU (DC333)
- U80703: FPU (DC337)
- U80707: Console interface/controller DLART (DC319)
- U80709: CPU interface gate array (DC379)
- U80711: Q22-Bus interface gate array (DC380)
References
- ^ Applikationszentrum Elektronik: Microelectronics general overview. (PDF in German language; 1,1 MB) Info-Verlag electronic, Berlin 1990, S. 236.
- ^ Specification book Workstation 32 bit K 1820 based on the microprocessor family MP 700 (PDF in German language 4,8 MB). VVS d 063–247/89, VEB Robotron-Elektronik Dresden, March 1989, Saxon Main State Archive, Dresden 11594-1361/1-2 .
External links
- Chip photos of the DEC 78032 and U80701
- Soviet, MicroVAX II compatible mainboard with U80701FC Archived 2015-07-12 at the Wayback Machine