Bridging 8- through 32-bit applications. (leading edge).(Mitsubishi M16C/10 and M32C/83)(Product Announcement)

EDN, December, 2001 by Cravotta, Robert

In an effort to cover the processing needs across high-end, 8-bit and low-end, 32-bit applications using the same core, code, and package configuration, Mitsubishi is adding two processor families, the M 16C/10 and M32C/83, to its standard 16-bit platform. The company based both families on its 16-bit M16C core. They integrate 16 to 512 kbytes of flash memory; 1, 2, or 31 kbytes of RAM; a 1O-bit ADC; and an 8-bit DAC. The M32C/83 operates at 30 MHz and features two independent circuits for each of the ADC and the DAC, 12 timer/counter channels, 28 PWM channels, and a controller-area-network function.

The 16-bit platform maintains a broad range of processors that offer consistency in instruction set, peripheral functions, and configuration, such as pin...

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