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MC9S12E128 - New HCS12 microcontroller

Started by Doron Fael July 1, 2003
Hello all,

I think many list members will be interested in finding out information on
the new HCS12 - MC9S12E128 microcontroller which is today announced by
Motorola.

The new MC9S12E128 has many qualities that make it interesting for many
applications:
1) It is the first HCS12 part designed especially for the general market.
2) It can be powered by voltage in the entire range of 3V - 5.5V while
maintaining 25MHz bus speed operation.
3) It includes new peripherals such as: Two 8 bit D/A converters, three
16-bit 4-channel timers, and PWM with fault-protect. This is addition to
the familiar 6 pin PWM, IIC, three SCIs, one SPI, and 16 pin 10-bit A/D
converter.

The Motorola press release on the MC9S12E128 can be found at the following
link:
http://www.motorola.com/mediacenter/news/detail/0,1958,2975_2428_23,00.html Nohau offers both BDM and Full-ICE for the new MC9S12E128. Details are
found at:
http://www.nohau.com/press/s12e128_press_release.pdf I personally believe the new MC9S12E128 has traits which make it more
suitable for use in General-Market applications, as opposed to most of the
existing HCS12 derivatives which are targeted primarily for Automotive
applications. Hope this helps,
Doron
Nohau Corporation
HC12 In-Circuit Emulators
www.nohau.com/emul12pc.html



Technological Arts has this new boards called Adapt9S12E128 and
Adapt9S12E128. The E128 boards are certainly interesting with IrDA,
DACs and with the usual Ports. The MCU has a feature for motor
control system. Interesting stuff for robotics.

A LAN board too. Thinking of building one of those mobile ethernet
connected robots. RF links are cheap nowadays, probably doable. --- In , Doron Fael <doronf@n...> wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> I think many list members will be interested in finding out
information on
> the new HCS12 - MC9S12E128 microcontroller which is today announced
by
> Motorola.
>
> The new MC9S12E128 has many qualities that make it interesting for
many
> applications:
> 1) It is the first HCS12 part designed especially for the general
market.
> 2) It can be powered by voltage in the entire range of 3V - 5.5V
while
> maintaining 25MHz bus speed operation.
> 3) It includes new peripherals such as: Two 8 bit D/A converters,
three
> 16-bit 4-channel timers, and PWM with fault-protect. This is
addition to
> the familiar 6 pin PWM, IIC, three SCIs, one SPI, and 16 pin 10-bit
A/D
> converter.
>
> The Motorola press release on the MC9S12E128 can be found at the
following
> link:
>
http://www.motorola.com/mediacenter/news/detail/0,1958,2975_2428_23,00
.html
>
>
> Nohau offers both BDM and Full-ICE for the new MC9S12E128. Details
are
> found at:
> http://www.nohau.com/press/s12e128_press_release.pdf > I personally believe the new MC9S12E128 has traits which make it
more
> suitable for use in General-Market applications, as opposed to most
of the
> existing HCS12 derivatives which are targeted primarily for
Automotive
> applications. > Hope this helps,
> Doron
> Nohau Corporation
> HC12 In-Circuit Emulators
> www.nohau.com/emul12pc.html >
>





Hello all,

More news on the new MC9S12E128 and MC9S12E64 parts:

Motorola has made the data sheets now available on the Motorola Web-Site.
The links to the Motorola MC9S12E128 and MC9S12E64 web-pages are:
http://e-www.motorola.com/webapp/sps/site/prod_summary.jsp?code=MC9S12E128
and
http://e-www.motorola.com/webapp/sps/site/prod_summary.jsp?code=MC9S12E64

As mentioned, the new MC9S12E family has new capabilities that makes it
very interesting for general market applications. (3.3V operation, 3
timers, 2 D/As etc.).

Hope this helps,
Doron
Nohau Corporation
HC12 In-Circuit Emulators
www.nohau.com/emul12pc.html

At 08:09 PM 7/4/2003 +0000, you wrote:
>Technological Arts has this new boards called Adapt9S12E128 and
>Adapt9S12E128. The E128 boards are certainly interesting with IrDA,
>DACs and with the usual Ports. The MCU has a feature for motor
>control system. Interesting stuff for robotics.
>
>A LAN board too. Thinking of building one of those mobile ethernet
>connected robots. RF links are cheap nowadays, probably doable. >--- In , Doron Fael <doronf@n...> wrote:
> > Hello all,
> >
> > I think many list members will be interested in finding out information on
> > the new HCS12 - MC9S12E128 microcontroller which is today announced by
> > Motorola.
> >
> > The new MC9S12E128 has many qualities that make it interesting for many
> > applications:
> > 1) It is the first HCS12 part designed especially for the general market.
> > 2) It can be powered by voltage in the entire range of 3V - 5.5V while
> > maintaining 25MHz bus speed operation.
> > 3) It includes new peripherals such as: Two 8 bit D/A converters, three
> > 16-bit 4-channel timers, and PWM with fault-protect. This is addition to
> > the familiar 6 pin PWM, IIC, three SCIs, one SPI, and 16 pin 10-bit A/D
> > converter.
> >
> > The Motorola press release on the MC9S12E128 can be found at the following
> > link:
> >
>http://www.motorola.com/mediacenter/news/detail/0,1958,2975_2428_23,00.html
> >
> >
> > Nohau offers both BDM and Full-ICE for the new MC9S12E128. Details are
> > found at:
> > http://www.nohau.com/press/s12e128_press_release.pdf
> >
> >
> > I personally believe the new MC9S12E128 has traits which make it more
> > suitable for use in General-Market applications, as opposed to most of the
> > existing HCS12 derivatives which are targeted primarily for Automotive
> > applications.
> >
> >
> > Hope this helps,
> > Doron
> > Nohau Corporation
> > HC12 In-Circuit Emulators
> > www.nohau.com/emul12pc.html
> >