MPC51xx • The
MGT5100 was introduced in 2002 and Motorola's first CPU for its
mobileGT SoC-platform for
telematic, information and entertainment applications in cars. Based on the
e300 core that stems from the
PowerPC 603e, it ran in speeds up to 230 MHz and includes a
double precision FPU, 16/16 kB L1 data/instruction
caches and a rich set of
I/O peripherals like
DDR SDRAM,
USB,
PCI,
Ethernet,
IrDA and
ATA disk controllers. • The
MPC5121e was introduced in May 2007 and is based on the MPC5200B. It is a 400 MHz highly integrated SoC processor targeted for telematics applications and includes controllers for USB, PCI, networking, DDR RAM and disk storage. It also has an on-die
PowerVR MBX Lite GPU supporting
3D acceleration and displays up to 1280×720
pixels and a fully programmable 200 MHz
RISC co-processor designed for
multimedia processing like real-time audio and
speech recognition. • The
MPC5123 was introduced in April 2008 and is essentially a MPC5121e without the PowerVR coprocessor. It's designed for
telematics,
point of sales systems, health care equipment,
display kiosks and industrial automation.
MPC52xx The MPC5200 family is based on the e300 core MGT5100 processor and is also a part of Freescale's mobileGT platform. •
MPC5200 – 266–400 MHz, on-chip controllers for DDR-RAM, PCI, Ethernet, USB, ATA, serial, DMA and other I/O. Introduced in 2003, replaced by the MPC5200B. •
MPC5200B – 266-466 MHz, enhanced MPC5200, introduced in 2005. Also used in the small
EFIKA computer.
MPC55xx Based on the
e200 core that stems from the
MPC5xx core, it is upwards-compatible with the newer
e500 core and the older PowerPC Book E specification. Focus is on automotive and industrial control systems, like robotics, power train and fuel injection. The cores are the basis for a multitude of SoC controllers ranging from 40 to 600 MHz with a variety of additional functionality, like Flash-ROM, Ethernet controllers, and custom I/O. All MPC55xx processors are compliant with the
Power ISA v.2.03 specification. The MPC55xx family have four slightly different cores from the really low end and to the high end. •
MPC5510 – uses an
e200z1 core, with an optional
e200z0 core as co-processor. •
MPC5533 and
MPC5534 – uses
e200z3 cores. •
MPC5553,
MPC5554,
MPC5561,
MPC5565,
MPC5566 and
MPC5567 – uses
e200z6 cores.
MPC56xx The MPC56xx family are
PowerPC e200 core based microcontrollers jointly developed by Freescale and
STMicroelectronics. Built on a 90 nm fabrication process. These microcontrollers are tailor-made for
automotive applications like power steering, fuel injection, display control, powertrain, active suspension, chassis control, anti-lock braking systems, and radar for adaptive cruise control. Freescale calls these processors
MPC56xx and ST names them
SPC56x. •
MPC560xB/C or
SPC560B/C – Uses a single
e200z0 core at up to 64 MHz, up to 512 kB
Flash memory, 64 kB
EEPROM, up to 48 kB RAM. Used for automotive body electronics applications. •
MPC560xP or
SPC560P – Uses a single e200z0 core at up to 60 MHz, up to 512 kB Flash memory, up to 64 kB EEPROM, up to 40 kB RAM. Used for chassis and airbag control. •
MPC560xS or
SPC560S – Uses a single e200z0 core at up to 64 MHz, up to 1 MB Flash memory, 64 kB EEPROM, up to 48 kB RAM, and an on-chip display controller with up to 160 kB
VRAM. Used for
TFT color display control. •
MPC563xM or
SPC563M – Uses a single
e200z3 core at up to 80 MHz, up to 1.5 MB Flash memory, up to 111 kB
SRAM. Used for entry-level powertrain applications. •
MPC564xL or
SPC56EL – Uses dual
e200z4 cores at 120 MHz, 1 MB Flash memory, 128 kB SRAM. •
MPC5668G – Uses one
e200z6 core and one e200z0 core at up to 128 MHz, up to 2 MB Flash memory, 592 kB SRAM, integrated Ethernet controller. •
MPC5674F – Uses an
e200z7 core, up to 264 MHz, up to 4 MB Flash, 256 kB RAM. Used for powertrain, fuel and motor control. == See also ==