Zilog Z280

The Z280 in a PLCC68 package
STEbus Z280 processor

The Zilog Z280 is a 16-bit microprocessor designed by Zilog as an enhancement of the Zilog Z80 architecture and integrating improvements from the abandoned Zilog Z800 project. First introduced in July 1987, the Z280 is considered to be a commercial failure.

The Z280 was fabricated in CMOS,[1] added a memory management unit (MMU) to expand the addressing range to 16 MB, features for multitasking and multiprocessor and coprocessor configurations, and 256 bytes of on-chip static RAM, configurable as either a cache for instructions and/or data, or as part of the ordinary address space. It has a huge number of new instructions and addressing modes giving a total of over 2000 combinations. It is capable of efficiently handling 32-bit data operations including hardware multiply, divide, and sign extension. It offers Supervisor and User operating modes, and optionally separate address spaces for instructions and data in both modes (four total possible address spaces). Its internal clock signal can be configured to run at 1, 2 or 4 times the external clock's speed (e.g. a 12MHz CPU with a 3 MHz bus). Unlike the Z80 the Z280 uses a multiplexed arrangement for its address and data buses. More successful extensions of the Z80-architecture include the Hitachi HD64180 in 1986 and Zilog eZ80 in 2001, among others.

The Z280 had many advanced features for its time, most of them never seen again on a Zilog processor:[2]

In the early 1990s, a small number of single-board computers based on the Zilog Z280 were designed and produced by Tilmann Reh, but the CPU was never used in any commercially produced computer.[3]

In 2016, Lamar Owens contacted Tilmann Reh and obtained permission to have a small new run of the CPU280 system PCB's created, getting ten boards made and distributed to several beta builders. Wayne Warthen developed a build setup to rebuild the EPROM images and floppy disk images, and set up a page at Github for distribution and development. In spring 2018, another ten boards were made.[4]

  1. ^ EDN November 27, 1986 p133
  2. ^ Z280 MPU Microprocessor Unit Preliminary Technical Manual (PDF). San Jose, California: Zilog. 1989. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-09-11. Retrieved 2009-07-15.
  3. ^ "CPU280 System Software". Retrieved 2024-11-10.
  4. ^ "CPU280". Retrieved 2024-11-10.