banedon wrote:
I'd probably put resistor networks (in-line, not bussed to VCC) on all address bus and data bus pins in the same manner.
Yes, in-line. IOW, in series. There
is also such a thing as parallel termination, where a node gets attached to the junction between a resistor to ground and a resistor to Vcc. I won't try to say why that's more appropriate in some situations and less so in others. But series termination is easy and can help a lot, and that's why I suggest it.
Locate the resistor reasonably close to the signal source, be it the CPU, a flip flop, or whatever. And 100-200 (ish) ohms sounds high to me, although it'll depend on circumstances. I'd be more inclined to start with 50 ohms or so. If you socket the resistor arrays then you can try different values and see how things look on the scope.
It's somewhat of a judgment call. More ohms is gonna give a visually smoother waveform, but it also increases delay. So you don't wanna go overboard making it
look all soft and pretty. For clock lines, at least, you wanna keep the edges crisp, even at the expense of a small amount (say 0.5V p-p) of residual ringing.
Quote:
would the ATF1508 CPLD possibly suffer from this as well
If its outputs have very abrupt rise and fall times like those of WDC CPU's then yes.
I see you've posted some schematics while I was typing. Will have a look at those later...
-- Jeff
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