Reply 260 of 1356, by feipoa
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- l33t++
Blavius, thank you for that clarification. It is unfortunate that J1 was also the name of the pin header, lol! For the 3.6V SXL2, we'd jumper Vcc and J1, but for the 5V SXL2, we'd jumper +5V to VCC. However, if we are using the 5V SXL2, we'd have the trimmer set for the highest possible voltage already, which would be about 4.6-4.7 V and if the lower jumper for JP1 is soldered, wouldn't J1 then follow Vcc anyway, thus it would also be at 4.7 V? So, if a 5V SXL or SXL2 already runs at 4.7 V, would having PGA pin J1 running at 5.0 V vs. 4.7 V help matters any? I have not tested such a configuration, but my first thought is that it would not matter.
We don't know that the max operating frequency is 80 MHz. We know the few QFP144 variants tested can do 80 MHz without any hickups. Due to the rarity of the item, I have not taken my QFP144 unit above 80 MHz. I recall someone mentioning that he saw noted the QFP144 can do 90 MHz, so naturally with the adjustable regulator, I'm hoping for 100 MHz.
It is my opinion that the tach via be removed. You can still plug in a 3-wire fan cable to a 2-pin header. It will not hinder operation at all. You could even include one of those white fan connectors if you so choose, just remove the 3rd pin from it. I think we can let the individual doing the layout make up his own mind at this point.
From the majority of 386/486 interposers I've seen, they try to keep at least Cin next to the VRM. So I'm wondering if JP1 and tach vias removed, is there space to place Cin next to the VRM? Or if a 2-pin fan and MEMW# are placed on the same header, can 1x Cout and 1x Cin fit near the VRM? If not, what if their form factor is reduced, as discussed earlier?
Plan your life wisely, you'll be dead before you know it.