TheMOS Technology 6510is an8-bitmicroprocessordesigned byMOS Technology.It is a modified form of the very successful6502.The 6510 is widely used in theCommodore 64(C64)home computerand its variants. It is also used in theSeagate ST-251MFM harddisk.[1]
General information | |
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Common manufacturer | |
Performance | |
Max.CPUclock rate | 0.985 MHz to 1.023 MHz |
Data width | 8 |
Address width | 16 |
Architecture and classification | |
Instruction set | MOS 6502 |
Physical specifications | |
Package |
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Products, models, variants | |
Variant |
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History | |
Predecessor | MOS 6502 |
Successor | MOS 8502 |
The primary change from the 6502 is the addition of an 8-bit general purposeI/Oport, although 6 I/O pins are available in the most common version of the 6510. In addition, the address bus can be madetristateand the CPU can be halted cleanly.
Use
editIn the C64, the extra I/O pins of the processor are used to control the computer'smemory mapbybank switching,and for controlling three of the four signal lines of theDatasettetape recorder (the electric motor control, key-press sensing and write data lines; the read data line went to another I/O chip). It is possible, by writing the correctbit patternto the processor at address $01, to completely expose almost the full 64KBofRAMin the C64, leaving noROMorI/Ohardware exposed except for the processor I/O port itself and its data directional register at address $00.[2]
Variants
editMOS 8500
editIn 1985, MOS produced the8500,anHMOSversion of the 6510. Other than the process modification, it is virtually identical to theNMOSversion of the 6510. The 8500 was originally designed for use in the modernised C64, the C64C. However, in 1985, limited quantities of 8500s were found on older NMOS-based C64s. It finally made its official debut in 1987, appearing in a motherboard using the new 85xx HMOS chipset.
MOS 7501/8501
editThe7501/8501variant of the 6510 was introduced in 1984.[3]Compared to the 6510, this variant extends the number of I/O port pins from 6 to 8, but omits the pins for non-maskable interrupt and clock output.[4]It is used in Commodore'sC16,C116andPlus/4home computers, where its I/O port controls not only theDatasettebut also theCBM Businterface. The main difference between 7501 and 8501 CPUs is that they were manufactured with slightly different processes: 7501 was manufactured withHMOS-1and 8501 with HMOS-2.[3]
MOS 8502
editThe 2MHz-capable8502variant is used in theCommodore 128.All these CPUs areopcodecompatible (includingundocumented opcodes).[5]
MOS 6510T
editTheCommodore 1551disk drive (for theCommodore Plus/4) uses the6510T,a version of the 6510 with eight I/O lines. TheNMIand RDY signals are not available.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ST-251 schematic
- ^Butterfield, Jim (January 1983)."Commodore 64 Architecture".Compute!.No. 32. p. 208.
- ^abHardware – MOS 7501/8501
- ^CPU 7501 / 8501
- ^Graham."6502/6510/8500/8502 Opcodes".www.oxyron.de.
Further reading
editExternal links
edit- MOS 6510 datasheet (GIF format, zipped)
- MOS 6510 datasheet (PDF format)
- MOS 6510 datasheet (preliminary, Nov. 1982, PDF format)
- Siliconinsider@Twitter - Die shot of MOS Technology 6510at theWayback Machine(archived February 27, 2023)
- komkon.org - Computer Emulation Resources(includes downloadable source code for 6502)
- Web server using a MOS 6510 computer (aka C64)at theWayback Machine(archived July 28, 2018)