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Difference between revisions of "national semiconductor/imp-16"
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| {{national|IMP-16A/524}} || {{national|IMP-16A/424}} || Arithmetic CROM | | {{national|IMP-16A/524}} || {{national|IMP-16A/424}} || Arithmetic CROM | ||
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+ | ==2nd sources== | ||
+ | [[Rockwel]] was the only 2nd source for the IMP-16 series. | ||
== Design == | == Design == |
Latest revision as of 18:22, 5 November 2015
The National IMP-16 is a family of multi-chip 16-bit bit-slice microprocessor developed by National semiconductor and introduced in 1973. The chips were made using PMOS technology. Like the IMP-8, the IMP-16 was designed using 4 IMP-4 4-bit bit-slice logic units and a single control unit. The IMP-16 was later superseded by the PACE and later by the INS8900.
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Part (Commercial) |
Part (Military) |
Description |
IMP-16A/521 | IMP-16A/421 | Control and Read-only Memory (CROM) 16-bit standard instruction set |
IMP-16A/522 | IMP-16A/421 | Control and Read-only Memory (CROM) 16-bit extended instruction set |
IMP-16A/523 | IMP-16A/423 | I/O CROM |
IMP-16A/524 | IMP-16A/424 | Arithmetic CROM |
2nd sources[edit]
Rockwel was the only 2nd source for the IMP-16 series.
Design[edit]
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