PaulF wrote:
some ICs draw less power [with CS high] than they do with CS low and WE and OE high.
A worthwhile reminder!
Windfall wrote:
At the very least it doesn't make sense nowadays to use batteries to preserve data.
Batteries
do have their drawbacks. And ISTR Garth saying modern RAM's use more power during standby than RAM's from days gone by. Meanwhile, nonvolatile alternatives such as EEPROM and flash have been getting better and better. But AFAIK batteries remain the only option for Real Time Clocks, so if the battery has gotta be there anyway then some of the drawbacks are unavoidable.
richardc64 wrote:
My own "design" was pretty much no design at all. Never gave me any trouble, never lost data until batteries drained.
If you've had good results with this then I won't argue. But you haven't shown what stops the CPU when the power supply fails. You don't want the CPU trying to carry on during those moments when Vcc is decaying to 4.5V and so on -- it'd be no surprise if it crashed, and RAM corruption resulted. And the new-fangled chips generally include power-fail detection. (There are various products on the market, of course.)
When I built my own circuit, THAT was the part I wasn't happy with -- the power-fail
detection.
_________________
In 1988 my 65C02 got six new registers and 44 new full-speed instructions!
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