Last modified on 27 January 2010, at 11:13

ASIC

Revision as of 11:13, 27 January 2010 by MacDeath (Talk | contribs)

Application-Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC)

An ASIC is an especially manufactured custom chip designed to fulfil special functions.

The main reason is to perform special tasks or combine different electronic components into a single Integrated Circuit (chip).

Amstrad Custom chips

The Amstrad CPC used one custom chip: the video Gate Array (also called VGA – no connection with the Video PC standard).

Latter CPC cost down series included a "pre-ASIC" to merge the VGA and the CRTC.

The Amstrad Plus included a "second heart" simply referred as the ASIC.

CPC+ ASIC's part number is 40489


This Amstrad Plus ASIC perform many additional features that the old CPC series couldn't: the "Plus Features".

  • Hardware Sprites.
  • CRTC emulation.
  • Hardware Scrolling.
  • Maybe some interactions with the ACID chip in cartridges.
  • DMA sound channels.
  • Many many more.

Known Flaws

The Amstrad Plus ASIC improved a lot of the old CPC's capability. Yet this was a bit flawed.

  • Despite removing some tasks from the CPU (Z80), the ASIC had to use specific central memory addresses, so "took away" this memory from the CPU...

This was not that important for a 64KB RAM system (464+ and GX4000) yet this is a serious limitation when dealing with Extra memory (6128+ and Extra RAM peripheral)

  • There's a DMA bug (Help needed).
  • Some argue that the ASIC simply badly emulates an old CPC, but it is not really one. The colours are slightly different and some software (games) couldn't work until modified (patches for such old CPC games often exist now).


As a result, some people say that the Plus is not a CPC.


Internal Links

External Links

General information on ASICs.