[time-nuts] Follow-up question re: microcontroller families

Herbert Poetzl herbert at 13thfloor.at
Sat May 25 23:26:52 EDT 2013


On Sat, May 25, 2013 at 09:26:02PM -0400, Bob Camp wrote:
> Hi

> I realize this is a bit like water torture - sorry about that.

> If I go to Microchip Direct and ask for a PIC 18F with two
> UARTS and two A/D's I get the PIC18F86J72 and PIC 18F87J72.
> To me the second one is the obvious winner. It's got twice
> the flash for next to nothing more money. 1-25 piece price is
> $6.04.

> Same search, 1 A/D, 4 UARTS, lowest cost this time. PIC18F65J94
> is the winner. Lowest price package is $3.30 in 1-25 pieces.

4 UARTS are untypical for PICs and result in higher price
as the device usually has more pins (which makes them more
expensive)

> Are those some *very* arbitrary choices - you bet they are.
> They are random picks, and were not optimized to show any
> particular thing. Only to target an application that had some
> serial i/o and a bit of A/D involvement.

> Bottom line - not all PIC's are $1. once you start adding
> peripherals. For $6 over in ARM land, you can get a lot of
> chip. To be fair, my experience has been that you can do better
> in the PIC24 line once you start adding stuff. Searching the
> PIC24's is hard enough that my brief search tonight did not
> show up a lower cost part.

PIC24F04KA200 1 UART, 10 ADC, XLP, 1.38 USD (1.05 USD @1k)
PIC24EP32GP202 2 UART, 6 ADC, 2.76 USD (1.86 USD @1k)

One (dis)advantage of the Microchip PICs is that there
are so many different families and parts.

best,
Herbert

> Bob

> On May 25, 2013, at 9:05 PM, Bob Camp <lists at rtty.us> wrote:

>> Hi

>> I just realized the "buy direct" button on that page requires a login. The single piece direct price is $9.70. First price break is at 25 pieces (to $8.95).

>> Bob

>> On May 25, 2013, at 8:56 PM, Bob Camp <lists at rtty.us> wrote:

>>> Hi

>>> It's one of the Freescale K60's they have them in several speeds and packages. Others have similar parts.

>>> http://www.freescale.com/webapp/sps/site/prod_summary.jsp?code=K60_120&nodeId=01624698C9DE2DDDAF&tab=Buy_Parametric_Tab&fromSearch=false

>>> hopefully shows the family information

>>> The first part on the list is the MK60FN1M0VLQ12 for 8% more money you can get the 150 MHz core rather than the 120 MHz core version. Both have enough pins that you can get at a lot of the peripherals at once. Both have enough pins that they are not a lot of fun to solder by hand. Of course their BGA cousins are even less hand solder friendly….

>>> Bob


>>> On May 25, 2013, at 6:48 PM, Graham / KE9H <timenut at austin.rr.com> wrote:

>>>> On 5/25/2013 3:40 PM, Bob Camp wrote:
>>>>> You can get a part with 1MB of flash, 128KB of ram, 6 UARTS, 4 16 bit A/D's, 10/100 Ethernet, USB, and a bunch of other stuff for less than $10. Drop this and that, go to half the flash, and yup, the price is 1/2. Comes with a free toolchain and two very capable free versions of RTOS.


>>>> Bob:

>>>> I was wondering which manufacturer/part you were referring to.

>>>> Thanks,
>>>> --- Graham

>>>> ==

>>> _______________________________________________
>>> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts at febo.com
>>> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
>>> and follow the instructions there.

>> _______________________________________________
>> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts at febo.com
>> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
>> and follow the instructions there.

> _______________________________________________
> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts at febo.com
> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> and follow the instructions there.


More information about the time-nuts mailing list