From WikiChip
Difference between revisions of "national semiconductor/cops ii"
< national semiconductor

m
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{national title|COPS II}}
 
{{national title|COPS II}}
The '''Controller Oriented Processor System II''' or '''COP400''' or '''COPS II''' or simply '''COPS''' is a [[microprocessor family|family]] of [[4-bit architecture|4-bit]] [[microcontroller]]s developed by [[National Semiconductor]]. The family was introduced a year after the {{national|cops i|COPS I}} in 1977. Components in the COPS II were made in [[NMOS]] and [[CMOS]] technology instead of [[PMOS]] as used in COPS I. The COPS II obsoleted the COPS I family soon after release. As their name implies, these chips found their way to many consumer controllers and electric appliances.
+
{{ic family
 +
| title            = National COPS
 +
| image            = <!-- Image representation of the IC family, e.g. "MCS-4.jpg"  -->
 +
| caption          = <!-- description of the image                                  -->
 +
| developer        = National Semiconductor
 +
| manufacturer      = National Semiconductor
 +
| type              = microcontrollers
 +
| production start  = 1977
 +
| arch              = <!-- architecture, e.g. "4-bit bit-slice"                      -->
 +
| isa              = COPS
 +
| word              = 4 bit
 +
| proc              = <!-- process, e.g. "8 μm"                                      -->
 +
| tech              = nMOS
 +
| tech 2            = CMOS
 +
| clock            = <!-- clock speed, e.g. "740 kHz"  IF RANGE, USE PARAM BELOW!  -->
 +
| clock min        = 340 kHz
 +
| clock max        = 400 kHz
 +
| package          = DIP24
 +
| package 2        = DIP28
 +
}}
 +
The '''COP400''' or '''COPS II''' or simply '''COPS''' ('''Controller Oriented Processor System II''') was a [[microprocessor family|family]] of {{arch|4}} [[microcontroller]]s developed by [[National Semiconductor]]. The family was introduced a year after the {{national|cops i|COPS I}} in 1977. Components in the COPS II were made in [[nMOS]] and [[CMOS]] technology instead of [[pMOS]] as used in COPS I. The COPS II obsoleted the COPS I family soon after release.
  
 
==2nd sources==
 
==2nd sources==
 
National Semiconductor, while almost exclusively never 2nd sourcing their own designs, did license the COPS II to [[Western Digital]] in 1980. WD continued manufacturing the COPS II until 1984 when they moved into the data storage market.
 
National Semiconductor, while almost exclusively never 2nd sourcing their own designs, did license the COPS II to [[Western Digital]] in 1980. WD continued manufacturing the COPS II until 1984 when they moved into the data storage market.
 +
 +
  
 
{{stub}}
 
{{stub}}

Revision as of 17:32, 5 February 2016

National COPS
no photo (ic).svg
Developer National Semiconductor
Manufacturer National Semiconductor
Type microcontrollers
Production 1977
ISA COPS
Word size 4 bit
0.5 octets
1 nibbles
Technology nMOS, CMOS
Clock 340 kHz-400 kHz
Package DIP24, DIP28

The COP400 or COPS II or simply COPS (Controller Oriented Processor System II) was a family of 4-bit microcontrollers developed by National Semiconductor. The family was introduced a year after the COPS I in 1977. Components in the COPS II were made in nMOS and CMOS technology instead of pMOS as used in COPS I. The COPS II obsoleted the COPS I family soon after release.

2nd sources

National Semiconductor, while almost exclusively never 2nd sourcing their own designs, did license the COPS II to Western Digital in 1980. WD continued manufacturing the COPS II until 1984 when they moved into the data storage market.


Text document with shapes.svg This article is still a stub and needs your attention. You can help improve this article by editing this page and adding the missing information.
designerNational Semiconductor +
full page namenational semiconductor/cops ii +
instance ofmicrocontroller family +
instruction set architectureCOPS +
main designerNational Semiconductor +
manufacturerNational Semiconductor +
nameNational COPS +
packageDIP24 + and DIP28 +
technologynMOS + and CMOS +
word size4 bit (0.5 octets, 1 nibbles) +