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 Post subject: 8501 dissection
PostPosted: Fri May 28, 2021 10:49 am 
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Side quest: 6509 versus 8501 clock generator dissection


This thread is about a transistor level dissection of what makes the 8501 different from the 6502,
brought to you by Frank Wolf and ttlworks.

The 8501 is a CPU introduced in 1984, manufactured in a HMOS-II process.
It was used in the Commodore computers: C16, C116, Plus/4.

Basically, it's a cousin of the 8500 (the HMOS variant of the 6510, used in the C64).

The difference to the 8500 is,
that the 8501 has 7 IO port pins (P0..P4, P6, P7),
that the 8501 has a GATE_IN pin for latching the AEC signal,
and that the 8501 has no NMI# pin.

Writing to the P5 data Bit and data direction Bit has no effect.
The P5 data Bit and data direction Bit always read back 0.

The data bus drivers are disabled during IO port writes,
means that during IO port writes, R/W# goes low, but there is no valid data on the bus.

Note:
for consistence with Frank's notation, low_active signals are named foo#, not /foo.

Orientation for all the chip pictures: PHI2(out) is North.


Last edited by ttlworks on Thu Jul 08, 2021 5:54 am, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: Re: 8501 dissection
PostPosted: Fri May 28, 2021 10:50 am 
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My Eagle 6.4 schematics for my schematic pictures in this thread,
just in case if somebody needs them.

Note: KiCad is supposed to be able to import these schematics,
unfortunately it doesn't seem to be possible to disable the layers 'name' and 'value' in KiCad schematics,
so making my schematics look nice and clean in KiCad will require some work, sorry.

Attachment:
8501r4_dissect_schematics.zip [134.81 KiB]
Downloaded 117 times


Last edited by ttlworks on Mon May 31, 2021 7:04 am, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: Re: 8501 dissection
PostPosted: Fri May 28, 2021 10:54 am 
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0) cheat sheet

A very simplified schematic to give an overview about what came out during the dissection.

Attachment:
8501_0_cheat_sheet.png
8501_0_cheat_sheet.png [ 100.47 KiB | Viewed 2663 times ]


A picture of the 8501 silicon, with the interesting areas marked according to the cheat sheet.

Attachment:
8501r4_orientation.png
8501r4_orientation.png [ 1023.85 KiB | Viewed 2811 times ]


Just as a reference, another picture of the 8501 silicon without the markings.

Attachment:
8501r4_small.png
8501r4_small.png [ 1.1 MiB | Viewed 2811 times ]


Last edited by ttlworks on Mon May 31, 2021 7:02 am, edited 2 times in total.

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 Post subject: Re: 8501 dissection
PostPosted: Fri May 28, 2021 10:56 am 
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1) Bias generator, located at the Nothern corner of the chip, between NMI# pad and IRQ# pad.

Nothing fancy, basically a ring oscillator plus output driver.

The 4 yellow boxes in the silicon picture labeled 'C' are small capacitors.


The NMI# pad is present in the silicon, but the chip has no NMI# pin,
this means that no wire is bonded to the pad.

It looks like the NMI# trace is tacked to the output capacitor of the bias generator
(the side of the capacitor which connects to the two FETs working as diodes)
by using a pullup (pulldown ?) FET, and we have no idea why.

;---

Edit: Spent some thoughts on this over the weekend.

The FET in question on the #NMI trace is wired up to work as a rectifier diode,
pretty much like the bigger FET working as a rectifier diode which connects to bias.

South from the small rectifier FET in question, the NMI# trace goes to the gate of an inverter,
the gate of said inverter has some capacitance to GND,
so when the NMI# pad is open a negative DC voltage forms up at that gate.

But the NMI# pad still has an ESD protection FET, which has a habit of clobbering down negative voltages.

Assuming 35kOhm/square for the active region of a transistor in HMOS-II,
when taking a look at the geometry of the small rectifier FET and the ESD protection FET,
what we have here works as a voltage divider:
It's similar to "35kOhm to negative bias and 1.82kOhm to GND".

Means as an end result, we are getting a small negative voltage on the open NMI# pad.
If bias would be -3V, NMI# pad would have ca. -0.15V.

//Note, that we have a ca. 20kOhm diffusion resistor between the NMI# pad and the center of the voltage divider.

Attachment:
si8501_1_bias_generator.png
si8501_1_bias_generator.png [ 57.29 KiB | Viewed 2812 times ]

Attachment:
si8501_1_nmi.png
si8501_1_nmi.png [ 6.85 KiB | Viewed 2812 times ]

Attachment:
8501_1_bias_generator.png
8501_1_bias_generator.png [ 68.87 KiB | Viewed 2665 times ]


Last edited by ttlworks on Mon May 31, 2021 7:01 am, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: Re: 8501 dissection
PostPosted: Fri May 28, 2021 10:58 am 
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2) AEC input buffer, located at the North West corner of the chip.

Nothing fancy in there:
AEC goes through three super buffers and becomes AEC_buffered.
AEC_buffered has the same polarity as AEC:

First super buffer is inverting, second is non_inverting, third is inverting.
Means that the group of super buffers as a whole is non_inverting.

There is a metal trace which connects to the output of the second (non_inverting) super buffer.
It goes East, but it's dead because it's cut at the R/W# buffer.
It probably was connected to the (low_active) output enable of the R/W buffer in a previous chip revision.
We are getting there later when taking a look at the R/W# pad driver.
//In the 6510, this connection probably isn't cut.

BTW: in theory, HMOS-II is supposed to have a ca. 30ns propagation delay per logic gate when there is no bias generator.
But since we have a bias generator on this chip, I'm not sure about those 30ns.

Attachment:
si8501_2_aec_input_buffer.png
si8501_2_aec_input_buffer.png [ 32.96 KiB | Viewed 2812 times ]

Attachment:
8501_2_aec_input_buffer.png
8501_2_aec_input_buffer.png [ 63.01 KiB | Viewed 2812 times ]


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 Post subject: Re: 8501 dissection
PostPosted: Fri May 28, 2021 10:59 am 
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3) GATE_IN logic, located South East on the chip, between GATE_IN pad and P7 pad.

GATE_IN goes through two inverting super buffers and becomes GATE_IN_buffered.
Means that GATE_IN_buffered has the same polarity as GATE_IN.

GATE_IN buffered then controls a fully static transparent latch (as in "74373").
The latch reads AEC_buffered, and gives out two signals:
The non_inverted AEC_gated, and the inverted AEC#_gated.

Attachment:
si8501_3_gate_in_logic.png
si8501_3_gate_in_logic.png [ 48.93 KiB | Viewed 2813 times ]

Attachment:
8501_3_gate_in_logic.png
8501_3_gate_in_logic.png [ 97.43 KiB | Viewed 2813 times ]


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 Post subject: Re: 8501 dissection
PostPosted: Fri May 28, 2021 11:02 am 
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4) IO address decoder.

;---

First, we have a 15 input NOR gate which checks A1..A15 to zero for identifying a read/write to IO address space.
Except that the NOR gate doesn't instantly pop out when looking at the chip.

What we really have on the chip is a long metal trace (labeled IO_SELECT) which runs at most of the West and South side of the chip.
Each of the A1..A15 pad drivers has a FET which is tied to the metal trace, and pulls said metal trace to GND if the related address Bit is 1,
but we are getting to the innards of the address pad drivers later.

Also connected to the metal trace, we have a cute tiny pullup FET, located East of the A4,A5 pads, and it's hard to spot.

The metal trace then goes to the input of a non inverting super buffer, which gives out IO_SELECT_buffered to the address decoder.
Said buffer is located North of the GND pad. (GND pad is on the South edge of the chip).
If the address points to $0000 or $0001, IO_SELECT_buffered is 1.

Attachment:
si8501_4_io_select_pullup.png
si8501_4_io_select_pullup.png [ 6.35 KiB | Viewed 2813 times ]

Attachment:
si8501_4_io_select_buffer.png
si8501_4_io_select_buffer.png [ 30.5 KiB | Viewed 2813 times ]


;---

Second, the address decoder logic is located North of the GATE_IN pad (GATE_IN pad is on the South edge of the chip).
//North of the address decoder logic, we have the logic for the IO ports.

At the West side of the address decoder logic we have two signals going in, IO_SELECT_buffered and A0#.
A0# is low_active and tapped from the innards of the A0 pad driver, we are getting to it later.

At the North side of the address decoder logic, we have the WRITE1 signal going in,
that's the output of a transparent latch which is gated with PHI1 and samples the CPU_W/R# signal, we are getting to it later.
Also, we have some output signals:
WR_IO# is a low active signal for switching the IO data bus during writes.
WR_0x00, RD_0x00, WR_0x01, RD_0x01 are high_active control signals for the IO port logic.
OE_D# is the low active output enable for the D0..D7 data pad drivers.

Note, that the D0..D7 data pad drivers are disabled during IO reads/writes.

Attachment:
si8501_4_io_address_decoder.png
si8501_4_io_address_decoder.png [ 64.13 KiB | Viewed 2659 times ]

Attachment:
8501_4_io_address_decoder.png
8501_4_io_address_decoder.png [ 253.17 KiB | Viewed 2813 times ]


Last edited by ttlworks on Mon May 31, 2021 10:34 am, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: Re: 8501 dissection
PostPosted: Fri May 28, 2021 11:03 am 
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5) data read/write control, data read/write timing stuff that is.

;---

The R/W# buffer is inverting, and it is fed with "internal_W/R#", we are getting later to this.

The logic for generating "internal_R/W#" is made from three little parts, which have different locations on the chip:

We have an AND gate (located west of the D4 pad driver) with PHI1 and GATE_IN_buffered at the inputs.
The output of the AND controls a transparent latch (which is located South of the D2 pad driver).
The latch samples CPU_W/R# and gives the signal to a lump of logic (which is located South of the D1 pad driver),
said lump of logic contains an inverter followed by an inverting super buffer,
which gives us "internal_W/R#" at the output.

Attachment:
si8501_5_rw.png
si8501_5_rw.png [ 28.43 KiB | Viewed 2814 times ]


;---

For the rest, we have one block of logic which is located North from the P0 IO logic
(West from the P0,P1 pad drivers, that is).

CPU_W/R# is sampled by a transparent latch controlled by PHI1, generating WRITE1 for the IO address decoder.

IO_SELECT_buffered (and the IO_SELECT_buffered# generated by an inverter) are sampled by transparent latches controlled by PHI1.
The outputs of the latches are driving two tricky pulse shapers which generate two signals from PHI2:
OE_IO_Data, high_active output enable for the read buffers in the IO logic for reading IO data into the CPU data input latch,
OE_Data_in, high_active output enable for the read buffers at the D0..D7 data pads for reading the external data bus into the CPU data input latch.

I would dare to say, that the purpose of these pulse shapers is to delay these two signals
to make sure that the data read from the buffers fits the CPU read hold timing.

Attachment:
si8501_5_timing.png
si8501_5_timing.png [ 32.52 KiB | Viewed 2814 times ]

Attachment:
8501_5_data read_write_control.png
8501_5_data read_write_control.png [ 103.54 KiB | Viewed 2814 times ]


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 Post subject: Re: 8501 dissection
PostPosted: Fri May 28, 2021 11:05 am 
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6) R/W# pad driver, high up North on the chip.

Nothing fancy.
Inverting buffer with low_active output enable.

Buffer inverts "internal W/R#" to external R/W.
Output enable is the low_active AEC_#gated signal.

Note the cut metal trace from AEC#_buffered to the R/W# pad driver output enable...

Attachment:
si8501_2_aec_cut.png
si8501_2_aec_cut.png [ 245.68 KiB | Viewed 2814 times ]

Attachment:
si8501_6_rw_aec_cut.png
si8501_6_rw_aec_cut.png [ 39.15 KiB | Viewed 2814 times ]

Attachment:
si8501_6_rw_pad_driver.png
si8501_6_rw_pad_driver.png [ 80.22 KiB | Viewed 2814 times ]

Attachment:
8501_6_rw_pad_driver.png
8501_6_rw_pad_driver.png [ 40.72 KiB | Viewed 2814 times ]


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 Post subject: Re: 8501 dissection
PostPosted: Fri May 28, 2021 11:08 am 
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7) D0 pad driver.

Nothing fancy in there.

D0 pad is driven by a non_inverting buffer (fed by D0_output),
the (write) buffer has a low_active output enable OE_D#.

D0 pad is read by an inverting buffer into the low_active D0_Data_in#,
the (read) buffer has a high_active output enable OE_Data_in.

7a) D3 pad driver.

Since the D3 pad driver has a different layout than the D0 pad driver,
I just wanted to know if both pad drivers have identical circuitry.

They have.

Attachment:
si8501_7_d0_pad_driver.png
si8501_7_d0_pad_driver.png [ 62.76 KiB | Viewed 2815 times ]

Attachment:
8501_7_d0_pad_driver.png
8501_7_d0_pad_driver.png [ 56.14 KiB | Viewed 2815 times ]


Attachment:
si8501_7a_d3_pad_driver.png
si8501_7a_d3_pad_driver.png [ 63.12 KiB | Viewed 2815 times ]

Attachment:
8501_7a_d3_pad_driver.png
8501_7a_d3_pad_driver.png [ 61.67 KiB | Viewed 2815 times ]


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 Post subject: Re: 8501 dissection
PostPosted: Fri May 28, 2021 11:09 am 
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8) A11 latch + pad driver, down in the south of the chip.

We have an inverter that turns A11_internal into the low_active A11_internal#.

A11_internal# is sampled by a latch (three FET switches plus a non_inverting super buffer),
controlled by PHI1, PHI2, and LD_ADDR.

The low_active latch output goes to the A11 pad driver.
Also, the low_active latch output goes into a super buffer.
The high_active super buffer output goes to the A11 pad driver,
also it goes to the gate of a FET that switches IO_SELECT to GND.

Said FET is present in the A1..A15 logic, together with the IO_SELECT metal trace
and one pullup resistor this gives us a 15 input NOR gate for detecting the IO address range
$0000 and $0001, we already had mentioned this in 4) IO address decoder.

Also, the address decoder taps into the inverted output of the A0 address latch,
using the A0# signal to find out if the address is $0000 or $0001.

The A11 pad driver has a high_active output enable: AEC_buffered.

Attachment:
si8501_8_a11_latch_pad_driver.png
si8501_8_a11_latch_pad_driver.png [ 58.85 KiB | Viewed 2815 times ]

Attachment:
8501_8_a11_latch_pad_driver.png
8501_8_a11_latch_pad_driver.png [ 117.89 KiB | Viewed 2815 times ]


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 Post subject: Re: 8501 dissection
PostPosted: Fri May 28, 2021 11:13 am 
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9) IO port.

The IO port logic is rather compact, and west from the P1..P3 pad drivers.

From North to South, we have the logic related to P0, P1, P2, P3, P4, P6, P7,
then the logic which makes the data Bit and data direction Bit for P5 zero during reads.
//There is no P5 IO port in the 8501.

//North from the IO port logic blocks we have data read/write control.
//South from the IO port logic blocks we have the IO address decoder.

P0 pad driver layout is a bit different from P1 pad driver layout, but the circuitry is identical.
The P0 pad driver is nothing fancy.

Attachment:
si8501_9_io_port_driver.png
si8501_9_io_port_driver.png [ 49.41 KiB | Viewed 2814 times ]


Note, that the ESD protection FET is not located close to the P0 pad.
It's part of the P0 IO port logic block, which isn't optimal.
My guess is that the designers did run out of space on the chips,
and that unlike with the 6522 and 6526 the IO port pins of the 8501
were not ment to give signals to the outerworld (outside of the computer).

Looks like the IO port logic blocks were created by copy+paste,
means the layout of all the IO logic blocks is more or less the same.
So we only take a look at the P0 IO port logic.

The low_active WR_IO# control signal puts the D0_output of the CPU on the IO data bus during peripheral writes.

An inverting super buffer with a FET switch at the output controlled by the high_active OE_IO_Data signal
puts the inverted data from the IO data bus on D0_data_in#.
D0_data_in# also is fed by the D0 pad input buffer.
D0_data_in# goes through a simple inverter before it enters the CPU as D0_data_in_latch.

In the IO logic, we have two latches:
WR_0x00 writes the P0 data direction latch.
WR_0x01 writes the P0 data latch.

The P0 input is sampled at PHI1 by a latch.
Depending on if P0 is configurated as an input or an output,
we have a multiplexer that either sends the output of the P0 latch to the IO data bus,
or the output of the P0 data register.
Connections at the multiplexer look a bit unusual,
but I would say if a designer is paranoid about output pins of different chips working against each other,
it seems to make sense.

Attachment:
si8501_9_io_port_logic.png
si8501_9_io_port_logic.png [ 70.65 KiB | Viewed 2814 times ]

Attachment:
8501_9_io_port.png
8501_9_io_port.png [ 191.48 KiB | Viewed 2814 times ]


8501 has no P5.
There is a block circuitry that forces the P5 data Bit and data direction bit to 0,
and it looks like a normal IO block just was cut down to the bare minimum.

Attachment:
si8501_9a_unused_p5.png
si8501_9a_unused_p5.png [ 25.08 KiB | Viewed 2814 times ]

Attachment:
8501_9a_unused_p5.png
8501_9a_unused_p5.png [ 44.77 KiB | Viewed 2814 times ]


Last edited by ttlworks on Wed Jun 02, 2021 6:40 am, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: Re: 8501 dissection
PostPosted: Fri May 28, 2021 11:14 am 
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And that's all for now.

6509 is next.


Last edited by ttlworks on Fri Jun 04, 2021 2:02 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: Re: 8501 dissection
PostPosted: Fri May 28, 2021 11:53 am 
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Wow! A great deal of splendid capturing, investigation and exposition. Many thanks for sharing.

I hope one day we manage to make sense of that NMI situation.


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 Post subject: Re: 8501 dissection
PostPosted: Fri May 28, 2021 11:57 am 
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@ttlworks:

I'd like to thank you again publicly for putting so much work into this documentation!

Your work is absolutely tremendous and I *REALLY* look forward to our next little projects.


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