rasz_pl wrote on 2023-10-06, 16:27:
unless thats what 6x Pericom PI5C 3861Q '10-Bit, 2-Port Bus Switch' chips are for? Pass signals thru resistors one way, enable transparent connection the other way?
These kind of bus switch can in fact be used for voltage limitation. They use similar bus switches on late PCI graphics cards like the GeForce 5200 PCI. The GeForce chip is not 5V tolerant, just as the RAM chips on these modules, yet the GeForce 5200 PCI is on a PCB with the 5V voltage coding.
The idea is that these switches are basically nothing more than 10 enhancement-mode N-Channel FET switches. This means that the FET provides a low resistance between the two "busses" when the gate voltage is sufficiently higher than the bus voltage, but blocks conduction when the gate voltage is not at least ~0.7 to 1V higher than the bus voltage. If you supply these FET switches with around 4.0 to 4.3V, they are unable to drive the gate of the internal FET high enough to pass voltages exceeding around 3.3V. I found datasheets for similar FET switches that explicitly mentioned this applications. Some vendors even produce these FET switches with a silicon dropper diode in the Vcc line to drop 5V supply voltage to the required supply voltage to make them a 3.3V clamp.
This kind of clamp is definitely not a precision clamp, but the only really important property is that the leakage current at ~3.6V is sufficiently low that the ESD clamping diodes in the 3.3V RAM do not get overloaded, and they pass signals well enough up to 2.5V or something like that, to not inhibt 3.3V CMOS or 5V TTL high levels from propagating through them. It's noteworthy that the channel resistance of this bus switch is specified at 0V (5 ohm typical) and at 2.4V (10 ohm typical), but they don't mention the channel resistance at higher signal voltags - because it will be quite high, and passing 2.4V is good enough to pass a TTL high level.