Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!swrinde!mips!hal!mark From: mark@mips.COM (Mark G. Johnson) Newsgroups: sci.electronics Subject: Re: Spice models of motherboards Message-ID: <43810@mips.mips.COM> Date: 5 Dec 90 17:11:59 GMT References: <13970@june.cs.washington.edu> Sender: news@mips.COM Reply-To: mark@mips.COM (Mark G. Johnson) Lines: 35 There are a couple of documents that will be of great benefit to fledgling backplane bus designers. The most important one is "Motorola MECL System Design Handbook" by William Blood, available from your local Motorola salesman. The next most important one is "Design Guide for SPICE Simulation of Signetics Bipolar Logic". These contain good introductions to the theory of transmission lines and the problems of backplane bus operation in general. If you can spend the money, I highly recommend the purchase of a specialized simulator called TLC. It handles transmission lines extremely well. Available from Quad Design Technology, Camarillo, CA. Several connector vendors have written technical reports on the electrical properties of their products; most contain a page or two with an explicit SPICE equivalent circuit. One place to start is the low priced "Metral" connector from DuPont, which is one of the accepted standard connectors for FutureBus. As a general rule, connector performance goes hand-in-hand with price; you want speed, you pay buxx. One of the things that becomes important at high speeds is crosstalk. Just as you need to ground every other wire in a ribbon cable to reduce crosstalk, you also need to provide large numbers of AC grounds in the pin-matrix of a backplane connector to reduce crosstalk. There is a tradeoff of pin-usage (some would say pin-wastage) versus signal quality; electrically best would be a N grounds per 1 signal pin (N >> 1) but that's expensive. A compromise is a checkerboard pattern of AC grounds and signals, which uses up half the connector pins for AC grounds. Or as another poster has indicated, you can employ differential signalling: use two wires to send one bit. Halves the width of the bus but vastly improves noise immunity. -- -- Mark Johnson MIPS Computer Systems, 930 E. Arques M/S 2-02, Sunnyvale, CA 94086 (408) 524-8308 mark@mips.com {or ...!decwrl!mips!mark} Brought to you by Super Global Mega Corp .com