Arlet wrote:
More important than the access time is the max clock frequency, both of the SRAM, and what you can manage to get done with the FPGA and on the board. At these frequencies, it will be challenging...
Arlet, I'm glad you posted. I am postulating here, so forgive my lofty goals if they are not attainable...
This 1900x1080 will be the most aggressive of timings. Right now I am confident of 720p timings for a HDMI interface board I mentioned before, maybe 1280x720, using the current 2M SyncRAM. I am trying to plan for the Mainboard as it will need to be finalized soon. Always taking into consideration of at least 1 frame buffer in the SyncRAM... I would very much like to squeeze every last
bit of performance from the $130+ 4M SyncRAM IC,
if we were to head in this direction. I am a "Cost No Object" type performance oriented hobbyist...
The v1.0h board would require a videoDAC of a higher speed grade than the current 140MHz grade. Aside from this, I'm thinking maybe a CPU core (90+MHz), or maybe multiple RGB ALU's (100MHz+), controlled by the 8-bit parallel interface. Can the internal FPGA FIFO can deal with these rates with a 180MHz pixel clock in your opinion?
EDIT: BTW, the GSi Technology pin for pin Cypress compatible SyncRAM datasheet is easier for me to read and understand than the Cypress parts' datasheet. These parts have interesting behavior, especially when compared to old-school ASyncRAM, as stated in the GSi Tech datasheet:"In Flow Through mode the device may begin driving out new data immediately after
new address are clocked into the RAM, rather than holding new data until the following (second) clock edge. Therefore, in Flow
Through mode the read pipeline is one cycle shorter than in Pipeline mode."