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+ | |name=FSD Chip | ||
+ | |designer=Tesla | ||
+ | |first announced=April 22, 2019 | ||
+ | |first launched=March 10, 2019 | ||
+ | }} | ||
'''Full Self-Driving Chip''' ('''FSD Chip''', previously '''Autopilot Hardware 3.0''') is an [[autonomous driving chip]] designed by [[tesla car|Tesla]] and announced in early [[2019]]. | '''Full Self-Driving Chip''' ('''FSD Chip''', previously '''Autopilot Hardware 3.0''') is an [[autonomous driving chip]] designed by [[tesla car|Tesla]] and announced in early [[2019]]. | ||
Revision as of 11:54, 26 April 2019
Edit Values | |
FSD Chip | |
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General Info | |
Designer | Tesla |
Introduction | April 22, 2019 (announced) March 10, 2019 (launched) |
Microarchitecture |
Full Self-Driving Chip (FSD Chip, previously Autopilot Hardware 3.0) is an autonomous driving chip designed by Tesla and announced in early 2019.
History
Design and planning for the FSD chip started in 2016 when the Tesla claims they saw no alternative solution that fits their problem of addressing autonomous driving. The FSD chip project was led by Pete Bannon. The design team was formed in February 2016. Development was done over the course of 18 months. In August 2017, the chip was released for manufacturing with first silicon coming back in December 2017 fully working. A number of additional modifications were done to the design, requiring respinning. B0 stepping was released to manufacturing in April 2018. Full production of B0 started shortly after qualifications in July 2018. In December 2018, Tesla started retrofitting employee cars with the new hardware and software stack. In March 2019, Tesla began volume shipping the FSD chip and computer in their Model S and Model X cars. Production shipment in the Tesla Model 3 started in April 2019.
Overview
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Full self-driving computer (FSD Computer)
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See also
- Nvidia Tegra Xavier
- Mobileye EyeQ
Bibliography
- Tesla Autonomy Day, Apr 22, 2019
- Tesla, personal communication, April 25, 2019
base frequency | 2,200 MHz (2.2 GHz, 2,200,000 kHz) + |
core count | 12 + |
core name | Cortex-A72 + |
core stepping | B0 + |
designer | Tesla (car company) + |
die area | 260 mm² (0.403 in², 2.6 cm², 260,000,000 µm²) + |
die length | 20 mm (2 cm, 0.787 in, 20,000 µm) + |
die width | 13 mm (1.3 cm, 0.512 in, 13,000 µm) + |
first announced | April 22, 2019 + |
first launched | March 10, 2019 + |
full page name | tesla (car company)/fsd chip + |
has ecc memory support | true + |
instance of | microprocessor + |
isa | ARMv8.0-A + |
isa family | ARM + |
ldate | March 10, 2019 + |
main image | ![]() |
manufacturer | Samsung + |
market segment | Automotive + |
max memory | 8,192 MiB (8,388,608 KiB, 8,589,934,592 B, 8 GiB, 0.00781 TiB) + |
max memory bandwidth | 63.58 GiB/s (65,105.92 MiB/s, 68.269 GB/s, 68,268.505 MB/s, 0.0621 TiB/s, 0.0683 TB/s) + |
microarchitecture | Cortex-A72 + |
name | FSD Chip + |
package | FCBGA-2116 + |
process | 14 nm (0.014 μm, 1.4e-5 mm) + |
supported memory type | LPDDR4-4266 + |
tdp | 36 W (36,000 mW, 0.0483 hp, 0.036 kW) + |
technology | CMOS + |
thread count | 12 + |
transistor count | 6,000,000,000 + |
word size | 64 bit (8 octets, 16 nibbles) + |