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News & Events : Press
Releases : V160
Pentium III VMEbus Board Provides Low-Cost, High-Performance
Drop-In Replacement For Legacy 68K/PowerPC VMEbus Boards
New Pentium VMEbus Board Runs VxWorks Applications 250% Faster For
Half The Price
November 19, 2002
Rancho Cucamonga, CA.
General Micro Systems today announced a new high-performance Pentium
III VMEbus CPU board that can be used as a drop-in replacement for
legacy 68040, 68060 and PowerPC VMEbus CPU boards running the VxWorks
real-time operating system. This Pentium board, known as the V160
Liberty, runs VxWorks applications 250% faster at a cost of about
half the price of Motorola’s fastest VMEbus CPU boards. The
V160 also adds new functionality not available on the Motorola boards,
including an additional Ethernet port, two PMC expansion ports,
two additional serial ports, and an IDE interface. The
V160 is based on the Pentium III/ Celeron processors and 440GX
chip set, provides a full 64-bit VME64 interface utilizing the Tundra
Universe II device, and can function as a VMEbus master, slave,
or system controller. Featuring a maximum clock speed of 1 GHz,
the V160 is equipped with up to 1 Gbyte of main memory (upgradeable
to 2 Gbytes) and 256 kbytes of on-die L2 cache. The V160 also features
two 10/100Base-Tx Ethernet channels, an Ultra Wide SCSI interface,
and two PMC ports, which support up to five PMC expansion cards.
The V160 supports all the legacy I/O functions needed to run Windows
and VxWorks out of the box, including four serial I/O ports, two
USB ports, a floppy port, mouse port, keyboard port, and four 32-bit
timers. The V160 also provides two IDE DMA-33 ports, which support
current rotating media drives up to 100-Gbytes, or 20 GBbytes of
flash drive, all within a single VMEbus slot. Other system I/O features
include optional Compact Flash, 4 Mbytes of system BIOS/user flash,
256 bytes of serial EEPROM (for VxWorks boot parameters) up to 16
Mbytes of optional bootable disk-on-chip flash, and up to 8 kbytes
of battery-backed nonvolatile RAM.
Not only are the 68k and PowerPC 750 dogs when it comes to embedded
applications, they’re being discontinued,” said Ben
Sharfi, president of General Micro Systems. “The V160 makes
it easy to migrate to Pentium platforms by providing a drop-in replacement
for 68k and PowerPC 750 VMEbus boards that not only runs two to
three times faster, but costs half as much. The ultimate PowerPC
750 killer.” The
V160 features a detailed diagnostic and failure reporting system,
providing full Power-On-Self-Test (POST) diagnostics that utilize
eight binary front panel displays to indicate status for the POST
function currently executing. The V160 also monitors key onboard
and CPU parameters such as voltage and temperature, using front
panel LEDs to report failures. The V160 also uses a watchdog timer
that can prevent lockups by terminating the current task, generating
system interrupts and resetting the CPU or I/O devices.
The V160 runs Windows NT/2000, VxWorks, Solaris x86, QNX and Linux.
The V160 also runs Windows NT Embedded, including the deterministic
Real-Time Extensions offered by Venturecom.
The V160 equipped with an 850MHz Celeron CPU and 64 Mbytes of SODIMM
SDRAM is a common configuration. For more information on the V160,
such as price and availability, please contact General Micro Systems,
Inc. at 8358 Maple Place, Rancho Cucamonga, CA 91730. Phone: 1-800-307-4863
or (909) 980-4863. Fax: (909) 987-4863. E-mail: sales@gms4sbc.com.
World Wide Web site: www.gms4sbc.com
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