BigDumbDinosaur wrote:
As for stealing cables from a substation, that could be an electrifying experience.
Oh lordy, yes. Couple an unfortunately uneducated population with easily accessible high current carrying copper and... community policing is sometimes not a lot of fun.
I remembered that I wanted to come back and comment on the '4245 propagation times. Specifically because I thought someone said they read - or saw - that it was slow. Like on the order of a 100ns. I can't find that comment now so maybe I just imagined it or read it in another thread.
Either way though the 74LVC4245 datasheet shows a typical propagation time for up translation from 3.3V to 5V of around about 3.3ns. And that is ridiculously fast. And that's not the end of it either. If you're driving only one or two other LVC chips then your propagation times can be even faster. The 74LVC4245 datasheet shows a minimum propagation time of 1ns. I kind of interpret that as some engineer being asked to put a minimum number down and just throwing his hands up and going fine, whatever, 1ns it is.
In part I say that because there may be cases where its propagation is even faster than 1ns but how useful or usable that is debatable.
I'm actually using the
74ALVC164245, not the the 74LVC4245. It's got 16 data lines rather than the '4245s 8 data lines. And as an added bonus the '164245s datasheet lists the propagation time for up translation from 3.3V to 5V at only 2.5ns. And a minimum propagation time of 1.2ns. I mean that's fast. That's really, really fast. So fast in fact that it is basically irrelevant to - say - address decode timings on a 65x based system running at 20Mhz.
And the 74ALVC164245 seems to truly, stably manage that nanosecond propagation time. With caveats. I'm using a Siglent SDS1204X 200Mhz oscilloscope at 1GSa/s per channel to measure the rise and fall time of the '164245. That's not ideal because I'm getting maybe two or three digital samples around the high to low transition. And the analogue bandwidth SHOULD be attenuating the signal a lot. But it doesn't seem to be that bad. So maybe the baby Siglent is a good deal more capable than it's officially rated. (And good high frequency probes make a difference). And now with all of that said and also imposing some 'enthusiastic' interpretations on the dotty signal... I think I can see real propagation delays on a 74ALVC164245 of about 1ns when it's driving only a single Alliance SRAM IC on one side and a 65C816 on the other.
Why did I write all of this? I don't really know. It's just fun to mention that the '164245 is a very fast voltage translator with output enables. That's pretty cool.
And I didn't even mention the 74ABT245 yet.