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Date:      Tue, 17 Sep 1996 10:23:10 +0930 (CST)
From:      Michael Smith <msmith@atrad.adelaide.edu.au>
To:        hsu@freefall.freebsd.org (Jeffrey Hsu)
Cc:        hardware@freefall.freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: passive backplane (was Re: Any Pentium boards with more than 4 PC) slots?
Message-ID:  <199609170053.KAA27601@genesis.atrad.adelaide.edu.au>
In-Reply-To: <199609161636.JAA15362@freefall.freebsd.org> from "Jeffrey Hsu" at Sep 16, 96 09:36:55 am

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Jeffrey Hsu stands accused of saying:
> 
> Speaking of passive backplanes, I have a question.  What are they
> used for?  The hardware engineer I asked a while ago didn't give
> a satisfying answer.  In fact, I've forgotten what it was.  But it
> must be good for something, because I keep seeing passive backplanes
> advertised in embedded systems magazines.

Some good things about PB's :

- Easy motherboard replacement (dike the card and drop in a new one).
- Space efficiency (no footprint area that's not covered by plugins).
- Small footprints (3xISA16 is not uncommon).
- Huge footprints (20xISA16 is not uncommon).
- Robustness (board flex on card insertion/removal is a non-problem).

Take a 20xISA16 PB, a small 486, ethernet and 18 dual-8255 cards and you
have 864 digital I/O lines.  You can do a hell of a lot of machine control
with that 8)

-- 
]] Mike Smith, Software Engineer        msmith@atrad.adelaide.edu.au    [[
]] Genesis Software                     genesis@atrad.adelaide.edu.au   [[
]] High-speed data acquisition and      (GSM mobile) 0411-222-496       [[
]] realtime instrument control          (ph/fax)  +61-8-267-3039        [[
]] Collector of old Unix hardware.      "Where are your PEZ?" The Tick  [[



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