Cardbus interface – Pico Communications E-14 User Manual
Page 16

E‐14 Hardware Reference Manual
www.picocomputing.com
Pico Computing, Inc.
16
CardBus Interface
The Pico E‐14 can run as a standalone product or be connected to a host using the CardBus connector.
By default, the Pico E‐14 ships with firmware that is ready for use as a CardBus slave device, but it also
supports bus mastering. That same firmware also provides the means to switch into standlone mode.
1
CardBus is a 32‐bit interface with a maximum speed of 33 MHz. The Pico E‐14 hardware is designed to
support standard PCMCIA as well as DMA mode. The CardBus standard specifies that all CardBus hosts
be backward compatible with PCMCIA.
Since CardBus systems can only be 3.3V, no digital translating transceivers are required to connect with
a host. This allows direct connection to the Virtex‐4 FPGA for reduced power consumption. With this
design, it is easily possible to reverse the CardBus interface and use the Pico E‐14 as a host controller
for other CardBus and PCMCIA cards.
Those who are interested in alternate interfaces should contact Pico Computing. The PCMCIA decoder
source code and support is available.
PCMCIA Interface Resources:
CompactFlash Association
www.compactflash.org
PCMCIA Website
www.pcmcia.org
1
For more information on standlone, reference the Standalone documentation located in the doc directory of where Pico
Utility is installed.