VPX Card Supports Quad FPGAs And Dual FMC Sites

Oct. 8, 2008
Announced as one of the industry’s first FPGA processing engines with support for the FMC/VITA 57 standard, the FPE650 VPX card integrates four Xilinx Virtex-5 FPGAs with two FMC I/O sites and VPX serial backplane connectivity, allowing I/O and

Announced as one of the industry’s first FPGA processing engines with support for the FMC/VITA 57 standard, the FPE650 VPX card integrates four Xilinx Virtex-5 FPGAs with two FMC I/O sites and VPX serial backplane connectivity, allowing I/O and processing capabilities in a single 6U slot. Available in air- and conduction-cooled versions, the card suits digital-signal processing applications such as electronic counter measures, signal intelligence, and electro optics. The FPGA sites support Virtex-5 SX95T, LX155T, or FX100T devices and each FPGA has four banks of memory. Two of the FPGAs interface to four 9-MB banks of QDR2 SRAM while the other two interface to two 9-MB banks of QDR2 SRAM and two 640-MB banks of DDR2 SDRAM. The FPE650 also provides backplane parallel I/O directly to two of the FPGAs. For pricing, call VMETRO INC., Houston, TX. (281) 584-0728.

Company: VMETRO INC.

Product URL: Click here for more information

Sponsored Recommendations

Highly Integrated 20A Digital Power Module for High Current Applications

March 20, 2024
Renesas latest power module delivers the highest efficiency (up to 94% peak) and fast time-to-market solution in an extremely small footprint. The RRM12120 is ideal for space...

Empowering Innovation: Your Power Partner for Tomorrow's Challenges

March 20, 2024
Discover how innovation, quality, and reliability are embedded into every aspect of Renesas' power products.

Article: Meeting the challenges of power conversion in e-bikes

March 18, 2024
Managing electrical noise in a compact and lightweight vehicle is a perpetual obstacle

Power modules provide high-efficiency conversion between 400V and 800V systems for electric vehicles

March 18, 2024
Porsche, Hyundai and GMC all are converting 400 – 800V today in very different ways. Learn more about how power modules stack up to these discrete designs.

Comments

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of Electronic Design, create an account today!