Nexxen wrote on 2020-10-04, 09:39:
Grzyb wrote on 2020-10-03, 21:17:
Wow, four BIOS chips!
On 286 boards (16-bit bus), it's common to have two BIOS chips - ODD and EVEN.
386 boards (32-bit bus), however, usually avoid having four chips, but this one is different...
Hi!
Can you expand on this subject? I know nothing about it.
Various processors have various data bus width:
8088 - 8-bit
8086, 286, 386SX - 16-bit
386DX, 486 - 32-bit
and the attached memory (RAM or ROM) must match.
Eg. 30-pin SIMM modules are 8-bit-wide, therefore one such module isn't enough for a 286 or 386SX - you need 2 or 4 of them.
For 386DX or 486 boards, you need 4 or 8.
Same story with ROM - 286 boards usually come with two 8-bit-wide chips.
386DX/486 would need four, and that board of yours is an example that some early boards indeed have four.
Later boards, however, do some multiplexing or similar technique - as a result, they only need one ROM chip for BIOS.
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