DSPs
Jim Dixon
jdd at aiki.demon.co.uk
Tue Aug 30 08:16:06 PDT 1994
In message <199408292302.QAA02577 at comsec.com> Eric Blossom writes:
> > The Motorola DSP96002 does an integer multiply in 2 or 3 clocks, so a
> > 33 MHz device does 11 million multiplies (and moves) a second. The
> > chip costs about $50.
>
> The 96002 is a floating point part. Last time I checked it cost
> several hundred dollars. I suspect that you were refering to the
> 56001/2 family (which does cost something like $50).
I checked the 56001 data book, but it does 24 bit integer multiplies,
not 32, so I didn't quote them. The figures I gave are for a 32-bit
integer multiply, right out of the 96002 data book.
I haven't checked 96002 prices for a couple of years. When I last
checked it was something like 200 pounds ($300) in small quantities.
It has now been outclassed by the C40 and several other very good
DSP chips and time has passed, so I think that in production
quantities the price would at least be under the $100 mark.
--
Jim Dixon
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