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micro chip

Technical Notes on the EEC-IV MCU.pdf

February 2, 2009 · Filed Under Others · Comment  · Tags: ,

The EEC-IV design began in 1978 and was first introduced in 1983 in the 1.6L Escort, Lynx, EXP and LN7 cars. It has gone through several major physical changes, the earliest using a fairly simple two board design with through hole soldered components while the last are more current in technology, showing extensive use of surface mount components and a much more finished and complex appearance. In between, there appears to be a variety of mother/daughter board and other designs. Still, they are all called EEC-IV, although somewhere in its life there was a Ford P/N generational change.

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Maxim - High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide.pdf

July 5, 2008 · Filed Under Electrical Engineering · 2 Comments  · Tags: , ,

In addition to improved efficiency, most devices can operate at a maximum clock rate of 33MHz or 40MHz. Combined with the three times performance, this allows for a maximum performance equivalent to a 99MHz or 120MHz 8051. This level of computing power is comparable to many 16-bit processors, but without the added expense.

Maxim - Ultra-High-Speed Flash Microcontroller User’s Guide.pdf

July 4, 2008 · Filed Under Electrical Engineering · Comment  · Tags: , ,

The fundamental innovation of the ultra-high-speed flash microcontroller is the use of only one clock per instruction cycle compared with 12 for the original 8051. This results in up to 12 times improvement in performance over the original 8051 architecture and up to four times improvement over other Dallas Semiconductor high-speed microcontrollers. The device provides several peripherals and features in addition to all of the standard features of an 80C32.

Maxim - Secure Microcontroller User’s Guide.pdf

July 3, 2008 · Filed Under Electrical Engineering · Comment  · Tags: , ,

The secure microcontroller family is divided between chips and modules. The chips are monolithic microprocessors that connect to a standard SRAM and lithium battery. The modules combine the microprocessor with the SRAM and lithium battery in a preassembled, pretested module. Depending on the specific configuration, modules are available in either 40-pin encapsulated DIP or SIMM module format.

Industrial Automation Control.pdf

40 Lessons in pdf files about Automation Control of Industrial field, still from ECE II Course of Kharagpur. Useful for those who are studying in Electrical, Mechanical, Industrial, and Manufacture.