The PDQ Board is an MCHCS12 single board computer that dramatically cuts the cost of data acquisition and control. It packs 1 megabyte of memory, communications, dozens of analog and digital I/O lines, and dual expansion I/O buses onto a compact low-cost board. This fast low power microcontroller measuring just 2.5” x 4” is an elegant alternative to pc104 and is ideal for instrumentation, industrial control, automation, and data acquisition.
The PDQ Board with the Mosaic IDE Plus (GNUC IDE/compiler) provides a high performance, enhanced memory alternative to development using Freescale's CodeWarrior on conventional, limited memory development boards.
The PDQ Board hosts a fast Freescale MC9S12A512 microcontroller (an upgrade of Motorola's 68HCS12, now also called a 9S12 or HCS12) – a combination microprocessor and fast, deterministic digital and analog I/O. The microprocessor sports a 16-bit data bus and uses a Phase Locked Loop to synthesize a 40MHz internal clock and 20MHz bus clock, resulting in execution speeds 8 times faster than the 8-bit 68HC11 processor. The processor's native address space is only 64K, so a paging architecture is used to expand the addressable memory to 1 MByte. The address space is populated by 512K internal Flash, 14K internal RAM, 1K processor registers, 1K internal EEPROM, plus 496K of fast off-chip RAM. The off-chip RAM comprises 16K of common unpaged RAM that is available for data storage regardless of the page, and 480 Kbytes of paged RAM. The paged RAM is shadowed by external Flash that acts like an onboard disk drive, restoring your program code from Flash memory each time the board is powered up. This flexible memory architecture allows for both RAM- and Flash-intensive applications, and makes program development a snap.
The PDQ Board packs dozens of analog and digital I/O lines plus versatile serial communications links onto a compact board. It delivers 8 digital I/O lines with counter/timer capabilities, 8 pulse-width modulated (PWM) digital output signals, and 8 general purpose digital I/O lines. Additional I/O includes sixteen analog inputs with 10-bit resolution, dual RS232/485 ports with speeds to 256 KBaud, and synchronous SPI and IIC serial interfaces. Any of the digital I/O ports can be configured for general purpose I/O, and the analog input lines can be configured as digital inputs. An optional battery-backed real-time clock reports the time and date.
The PDQ Board is easily programmable in C with the GNU C compiler, Forth or Assembly using any PC. Built-in programming tools include a multitasking executive and comprehensive device-driver libraries. All functions can be called interactively from the terminal to speed the debugging process. In addition, the processor implements a “Background Debug Mode” (BDM) in hardware that facilitates real-time debugging. An available attachment to your desktop PC connects to the BDM port on the board, enabling you to set breakpoints, single step, and trace to diagnose your program at runtime.
The PDQ Board Users Guide provides you with a good introduction to hardware and software interfacing. It's a total solution for learning and teaching real-time and embedded system design based on the Freescale HCS12/9S12 microcontroller. These guides will show you step-by-step how to program the HCS12 using both assembly and C languages using the GNU C based Mosaic IDE Plus. Pre-coded driver functions and supportive examples clearly illustrate all applications of the HCS12 peripheral functions, including its parallel port, timer functions, PWM output lines, timer capture lines, UART port, SPI, I2C, CAN, on-chip Flash and EEPROM programming, and paged external memory expansion.
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For guidance on using this controller, take a look at the following documents:
See also → Single Board Computers