FASTBUS was conceived as a replacement for CAMAC in data acquisition systems. Limitations of CAMAC were a slow bus speed, limited bus width, single bus controller and unwieldy inter-crate communications (the CAMAC Branch Highway). FASTBUS sought improvement in all these areas by using a faster bus logic (ECL), an asynchronous bus protocol, and a sophisticated multi-segment design. At the time, it seemed obvious that the way to get higher speed was a wide parallel bus, since the logic for each bit was already as fast as the electronics allowed. Later developments have moved to high-speed serial protocols such as SATA, leaving designs such as the FASTBUS serial segment as a technological dead end. The IEEE standard was originally approved in May 1984. FASTBUS was used in many high-energy physics experiments during the 1980s, principally at laboratories involved in the development of the standard. These include
CERN,
SLAC,
Fermilab,
Brookhaven National Laboratory, and
TRIUMF. FASTBUS has now largely been replaced by
VMEbus in smaller-scale systems and by custom designs (which have lower per-channel cost) in large systems. The problems of manufacturing cable segment transmitter chips reliably, together with the cable-handling issues of the wide parallel bus, contributed to the low usage of cable segments. The system interconnect modules were also complex and expensive, again discouraging cable segment use. These problems, together with the late development of inexpensive protocol chips, hindered the expression of the full potential of FASTBUS multi-segment architecture. == Standards ==