NEC V20
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The NEC V20 (μPD70108) was a processor made by NEC that was a reverse-engineered, pin-compatible version of the Intel 8088 with an instruction set compatible with the Intel 80186. The chip featured approximately 29,000 transistors, ran at 8 to 16 MHz and was around 30% faster (application dependent) than the 8088 at the same clock speed, primarily due to a hardware multiplier (whereas the 8088 had to perform multiplication using a microcode program). NEC V20 was used in "turbo" versions of some PC clones such as Commodore PC compatible systems, Copam, and Tandy 1110 laptop series. It was also used in the Casio PV-S450 PDA and Hewlett-Packard's HP 95LX. Sony also produced this microprocessor under license from NEC as the V20H (Sony CXQ70108).
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- Related: CPMulator
Casio FZ-1 information Casio FZ-1 information www.buchty.net/casio/files/ - Web |
Information from cpu-collection.de Information from cpu-collection.de www.cpu-collection.de/?l0=co&l1=NEC&l2=V20 - Web |
the V20 at CPU-World the V20 at CPU-World www.cpu-world.com/CPUs/V20/ - Web |
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