On 11/08/2008 07:37, schwepes at
moog.netaxs.com wrote:
The 8008 was only introduced a year after the 4004
which was
introduced in 1971. I can't find a pin out for either of them
but I suspect that they might be pin compatable so that the
upper four bits would be simply not used if the 8008 was put
in a system designed for a 4004.
Not even close, I'm afraid. The 4004 is a 16-pin device with Vdd (-10V)
and Vss (+5V) on the centre pins of the two sides, the 4 data bits on
pins 1-4, and the two clock phases and SYNC on pins 6-8. The 8008 is an
18-pin device with Vcc (+5V) and Vss (-9V) on diagonally opposite
corners (pins 1 and 10), D0-D7 on pins 2-9, and the clock phases and
SYNC on the other side (pins 14-16):
4004 8008
__ __ __ __
D0 | U | CMRAM0 (-9V) Vss | U | INT
D1 | | CMRAM1 D0 | | READY
D2 | | CMRAM2 D1 | | phi1
D3 | | CMRAM3 D2 | | phi2
(+5V) Vss | | Vdd (-10V) D3 | | SYNC
phi1 | | CMROM D4 | | S0
phi2 | | TEST D5 | | S1
SYNC |_____| RESET D6 | | S2
D7 |_____| Vcc (+5V)
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York