The NCR 53C9x is a family of application-specific integrated circuits (ASIC) produced by the former NCR Corporation and others for implementing the SCSI (small computer standard interface) bus protocol in hardware and relieving the host system of the work required to sequence the SCSI bus. The 53C9x was a low-cost solution and was therefore widely adopted by OEMs in various motherboard and peripheral device designs. The original 53C90 lacked direct memory access (DMA) capability, an omission that was addressed in the 53C90A and subsequent versions.
The 53C90(A) and later 53C94 supported the ANSI X3.l3I-I986 SCSI-1 protocol, implementing the eight bit parallel SCSI bus and eight bit host data bus transfers. The 53CF94 and 53CF96 added SCSI-2 support and implemented larger transfer sizes per SCSI transaction. Additionally, the 53CF96 could be interfaced to a single-ended bus or a high voltage differential (HVD) bus, the latter which supported long bus cables. All members of the 53C94/96 type support both eight and 16 bit host bus transfers via programmed input/output (PIO) and DMA.[1]
QLogic FAS216 and Emulex ESP100 chips are a drop-in replacement for the NCR 53C94. The 53C90A and 53C(F)94/96 were also produced under license by Advanced Micro Devices (AMD).[2]
A list of systems which included the 53C9x controller includes:
53C90A
- Sony PlayStation (console) Prototype (PS-X DTL-H500)[3]
53C94
- Sun Microsystems SPARCstations and the SPARCclassic
- DEC 3000 AXP
- DECstations and the PMAZ-A TURBOchannel card
- VAXstation model 60, 4000-m90
- MIPS Magnum
- Power Macintosh G3; often used as a secondary SCSI controller with MESH (Macintosh Enhanced SCSI Hardware) as the primary
- MacroSystem's Evolution family for Amiga (FAS216)
53C96
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ AMD publication 17348, revision B, May 1993
- ^ AMD publication 17348, revision B, May 1993
- ^ Sanzharovskiy, Andrey. "Some photos of the board…". X (formerly Twitter). Retrieved 17 May 2024.