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'''Fairchild 100K''' ('''F-100K''') was a family of very high-speed [[discrete logic chips]] introduced by [[Fairchild Semiconductor]] in the mid-1970s. The 100K series was implemented using [[emitter-coupled logic]] (ECL) making those chips considerably faster than comparable [[Schottky TTL]]-based chips. Many early high-speed systems made use of those chips. The 100K family were an improved version of the 10K which was originally introduced by [[Motorola]] but was also manufactured by Fairchild.
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'''Fairchild 100K''' ('''F-100K''') was a family of very high-speed [[discrete logic chips]] introduced by [[Fairchild Semiconductor]] in the mid-1970s. The 100K series was implemented using [[emitter-coupled logic]] (ECL) making those chips considerably faster than comparable [[Schottky TTL]]-based chips. The 100K family were an improved version of the 10K which was originally introduced by [[Motorola]] but was also manufactured by Fairchild. Many early high-speed systems and [[supercomputers]] made use of those chips.  
  
 
== Overview ==
 
== Overview ==

Revision as of 05:29, 27 May 2017

Fairchild 100K
Developer Fairchild
Manufacturer Fairchild
Type Discrete Logic
Introduction 1975 (launch)
Technology ECL
Succession
10K

Fairchild 100K (F-100K) was a family of very high-speed discrete logic chips introduced by Fairchild Semiconductor in the mid-1970s. The 100K series was implemented using emitter-coupled logic (ECL) making those chips considerably faster than comparable Schottky TTL-based chips. The 100K family were an improved version of the 10K which was originally introduced by Motorola but was also manufactured by Fairchild. Many early high-speed systems and supercomputers made use of those chips.

Overview

In the mid-1970s Fairchild introduced the 100K which was an improved version of the original 10K family. 100K-based parts found their way into many early high-performance systems. For example, the Floating Point Systems FPS-264 64-bit floating-point co-processor which was introduced in February 1985 performed 4 to 5 times faster than its predecessor, FPS-164, by simply switching from to 100K ECL from Schottky TTL; this was all done without making any architectural changes and maintaining 100% software compatibility.

Members

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Systems

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Facts about "100K - Fairchild"
designerFairchild +
first launched1975 +
full page namefairchild/100k +
instance ofintegrated circuit family +
main designerFairchild +
manufacturerFairchild +
nameFairchild 100K +
technologyECL +