BigEd wrote:
Nice! The pads will be scratched if the chips have been tested - probe cards leave marks. But I don't see any ink spots, so probably not.
My feeling is that 6inch wafers came quite late in the day. And of course, did not arrive everywhere at once. And indeed, the capital cost of a new line with all new equipment is enormous - not only do you need to find the money, but you need to be the kind of outfit with an eye to the future returns on that investment. And, to keep a 6 inch fab busy, you need to make a huge number of chips. Probably Commodore were too small volume to do that.
Well, Intel and TI survived that way.. and they also made chips for others. I guess the ultimate reason was Commodore's owner Gould. He has been described as one that didn't want to loose control of the company, so he would probably not have allow such a huge capital raise... But it remains speculation.
This report though is no speculation:
https://www.chiphistory.org/chc_upload/content_inline_files/pdf/industry_overview.pdfWith MOS, Commodore had a large edge over competitors in the early 80'ies. They could force price much lower without loosing money. With Amiga's many custom chips, they had the same edge even without the 68000 cpus. But with a costly 4inc line not being upgraded, that edge would have ultimately gone.. and they eventually bled out.
Another interesting thing (from the other pictures) are the ink spots. The 6525 for example, has a huge number of failed chips. Way lower than the 99.9% required for efficient production. Its slightly amusing, but also a sad fact.
You can argue that many of their products in the 90'ies were flops.. but such things are often decided by pricing. I remember the CD32 being way ahead of its time with videos on CD's.. but it was too expensive.
Edit: The 6526 "TRIPORT interface" was indeed the 6525 TRIPORT interface, not the 6526 PIA. I've bought one of those as well. I will try to examine it under an electron microscope when I get the chance (probably in around 4 weeks).