Spartan3 availability

L

Leon Heller

Guest
There seems to be some confusion about Spartan3 availability. According
to a Xilinx press release in October, several Spartan3 chips should be
in production. However, Insight Memec, the UK distributor, has just told
me that they haven't any in stock and don't even know when they will be
getting some! They were able to give me some prices, though.

Does anyone know what is going on?

Leon
--
Leon Heller, G1HSM
Email: aqzf13@dsl.pipex.com
My low-cost Philips LPC210x ARM develpment system:
http://www.geocities.com/leon_heller/lpc2104.html
 
Hi Leon,
Same situation here in Germany.
I ordered Spartan-3 FPGAs in September. My distributor cannot tell me when
I'll get them.
It seems that Xilinx serves the "big players" first and does not care about
small customers at all !
An "unofficial" statement from a Xilinx employee was "Spartan-3 is for
high-volume customers only"
I believe they have yield problems.

Maybe someone from Xilinx can comment this.

-Manfred Kraus


"Leon Heller" <aqzf13@dsl.pipex.com> wrote in message
news:3fe1fea1$0$25666$cc9e4d1f@news.dial.pipex.com...
There seems to be some confusion about Spartan3 availability. According
to a Xilinx press release in October, several Spartan3 chips should be
in production. However, Insight Memec, the UK distributor, has just told
me that they haven't any in stock and don't even know when they will be
getting some! They were able to give me some prices, though.

Does anyone know what is going on?

Leon
--
Leon Heller, G1HSM
Email: aqzf13@dsl.pipex.com
My low-cost Philips LPC210x ARM develpment system:
http://www.geocities.com/leon_heller/lpc2104.html
 
"Manfred Kraus" <makra7960@tiscali.de> writes:
Same situation here in Germany. I ordered Spartan-3 FPGAs in
September. My distributor cannot tell me when I'll get them. It seems
that Xilinx serves the "big players" first and does not care about
small customers at all ! An "unofficial" statement from a Xilinx
employee was "Spartan-3 is for high-volume customers only"
That shouldn't be a surprise, since it's the same thing that happened
with the Spartan 2. It was nearly a year between availability to
high-volume customers, and availability to everyone else.

Maybe someone from Xilinx can comment this.
Seems unlikely that you'll get any official comment. They allocate the
limited production where it will do them the most good. I would do the
same in their position.

If you're not going to buy in high volumes, you shouldn't try to use the
latest bleeding-edge chips. That's true of chips of any sort, not just
FPGAs.
 
Hate to say it, but this is why I use Altera. I can get Cyclones -- today.
And their free tools support the entire family.

Hard to beat that.


"Leon Heller" <aqzf13@dsl.pipex.com> wrote in message
news:3fe1fea1$0$25666$cc9e4d1f@news.dial.pipex.com...
There seems to be some confusion about Spartan3 availability. According
to a Xilinx press release in October, several Spartan3 chips should be
in production. However, Insight Memec, the UK distributor, has just told
me that they haven't any in stock and don't even know when they will be
getting some! They were able to give me some prices, though.

Does anyone know what is going on?

Leon
--
Leon Heller, G1HSM
Email: aqzf13@dsl.pipex.com
My low-cost Philips LPC210x ARM develpment system:
http://www.geocities.com/leon_heller/lpc2104.html
 
Eric Smith wrote:

"Manfred Kraus" <makra7960@tiscali.de> writes:

Same situation here in Germany. I ordered Spartan-3 FPGAs in
September. My distributor cannot tell me when I'll get them. It seems
that Xilinx serves the "big players" first and does not care about
small customers at all ! An "unofficial" statement from a Xilinx
employee was "Spartan-3 is for high-volume customers only"


That shouldn't be a surprise, since it's the same thing that happened
with the Spartan 2. It was nearly a year between availability to
high-volume customers, and availability to everyone else.


Maybe someone from Xilinx can comment this.


Seems unlikely that you'll get any official comment. They allocate the
limited production where it will do them the most good. I would do the
same in their position.

If you're not going to buy in high volumes, you shouldn't try to use the
latest bleeding-edge chips. That's true of chips of any sort, not just
FPGAs.
To be fair to Xilinx, I missed this:

"Pricing and Availability
The XC3S50, XC3S200, and XC3S400 Spartan-3 devices with 50,000, 200,000,
and 400,000 system gates respectively are available for less than
$6.50*. The XC3S1000 Spartan-3 device with 1 million system gates is
also available for under $12.00*. The entire Spartan-3 family will be
available in volume production in early 2004 from distributors
worldwide, or direct from Xilinx at www.xilinx.com/spartan/."

It does imply that some devices are available now, however. Perhaps they
are simply not available from distributors until early next year.

Leon
--
Leon Heller, G1HSM
Email: aqzf13@dsl.pipex.com
My low-cost Philips LPC210x ARM develpment system:
http://www.geocities.com/leon_heller/lpc2104.html
 
Eric Smith <eric-no-spam-for-me@brouhaha.com> wrote in message news:<qhr7z1bk75.fsf@ruckus.brouhaha.com>...
"Manfred Kraus" <makra7960@tiscali.de> writes:
Same situation here in Germany. I ordered Spartan-3 FPGAs in
September. My distributor cannot tell me when I'll get them. It seems
that Xilinx serves the "big players" first and does not care about
small customers at all ! this.

Seems unlikely that you'll get any official comment. They allocate the
limited production where it will do them the most good. I would do the
same in their position.
That's not entirely true. At least very small quantities (single
trays) gain a lot of design wins without hurting the volume shipments
to the big players.
The real problem are the arrogant big distributors in europe (and
xilinx as it does not understand that these distributors are a
problem)

I once had a case where Insight plainly lied to me about the
availability of samples in munich. Munich told me, that they had none,
but the Insight devisions in the Netherlands, Norway, Denmark and UK
just told me "Please order in Munich, they have stock".

A Xilinx representative in the UK was very helpful in convincing
Insight to send me the chips, but it took him a lot of emails and
phone calls.

I said before that Xilinx really needs a small distributor in Europe
beside the big guys Insight and Avnet.

Peter Alfke said that there is hope....

Kolja Sulimma
 
Patrick MacGregor <patrickmacgregor@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:u6CdnY2YoIl05X-iRVn-uw@comcast.com...
Hate to say it, but this is why I use Altera. I can get Cyclones --
today.
And their free tools support the entire family.

Aye, but to be fair, how long has Cyclone been out now?


Nial (with no real preference between A or X).

------------------------------------------------
Nial Stewart Developments Ltd
FPGA and High Speed Digital Design
www.nialstewartdevelopments.co.uk
 
Leon Heller <aqzf13@dsl.pipex.com> wrote:


: To be fair to Xilinx, I missed this:

: "Pricing and Availability
: The XC3S50, XC3S200, and XC3S400 Spartan-3 devices with 50,000, 200,000,
: and 400,000 system gates respectively are available for less than
: $6.50*. The XC3S1000 Spartan-3 device with 1 million system gates is
: also available for under $12.00*. The entire Spartan-3 family will be
: available in volume production in early 2004 from distributors
: worldwide, or direct from Xilinx at www.xilinx.com/spartan/."

: It does imply that some devices are available now, however. Perhaps they
: are simply not available from distributors until early next year.

That's probably marketing, that put out the note above.

The most recent datasheet
(http://direct.xilinx.com/bvdocs/publications/ds099-1.pdf) dated April
2003 on page 4 Product Ordering and availability still lists all devices in
parenthesis, with
3. Parentheses indicate that a given product is not yet released to
production. Contact sales for availability information.
I guess if some parts would already be in general availability the technical
people would feel worth the update to that datasheet.

Bye
--
Uwe Bonnes bon@elektron.ikp.physik.tu-darmstadt.de

Institut fuer Kernphysik Schlossgartenstrasse 9 64289 Darmstadt
--------- Tel. 06151 162516 -------- Fax. 06151 164321 ----------
 
Aye, but to be fair, how long has Cyclone been out now?
But you were able to buy small quantities early... not after
a year - IMHO.


--
Jerry
 
Leon Heller wrote:
Eric Smith wrote:

"Manfred Kraus" <makra7960@tiscali.de> writes:

Same situation here in Germany. I ordered Spartan-3 FPGAs in
September. My distributor cannot tell me when I'll get them. It seems
that Xilinx serves the "big players" first and does not care about
small customers at all ! An "unofficial" statement from a Xilinx
employee was "Spartan-3 is for high-volume customers only"


That shouldn't be a surprise, since it's the same thing that happened
with the Spartan 2. It was nearly a year between availability to
high-volume customers, and availability to everyone else.


Maybe someone from Xilinx can comment this.


Seems unlikely that you'll get any official comment. They allocate the
limited production where it will do them the most good. I would do the
same in their position.

If you're not going to buy in high volumes, you shouldn't try to use the
latest bleeding-edge chips. That's true of chips of any sort, not just
FPGAs.

To be fair to Xilinx, I missed this:

"Pricing and Availability
The XC3S50, XC3S200, and XC3S400 Spartan-3 devices with 50,000, 200,000,
and 400,000 system gates respectively are available for less than
$6.50*. The XC3S1000 Spartan-3 device with 1 million system gates is
also available for under $12.00*. The entire Spartan-3 family will be
available in volume production in early 2004 from distributors
worldwide, or direct from Xilinx at www.xilinx.com/spartan/."

It does imply that some devices are available now, however. Perhaps they
are simply not available from distributors until early next year.
It is not so much a matter of them not being available, it is more a
question of how you are trying to get them. You need to talk to your
distributor and get them to line up a few chips for you. I have not
gotten mine yet, but I have been assured that they will be coming in the
next month.

--

Rick "rickman" Collins

rick.collins@XYarius.com
Ignore the reply address. To email me use the above address with the XY
removed.

Arius - A Signal Processing Solutions Company
Specializing in DSP and FPGA design URL http://www.arius.com
4 King Ave 301-682-7772 Voice
Frederick, MD 21701-3110 301-682-7666 FAX
 
jerry1111 wrote:
Aye, but to be fair, how long has Cyclone been out now?

But you were able to buy small quantities early... not after
a year - IMHO.
I think it is more interesting that this thread has been discussed for a
full day now and no one from Xilinx has commented. Especially when one
poster mentioned rumors of yield issues. I would expect Xilinx to be
jumping all over that if it were just a rumor.

--

Rick "rickman" Collins

rick.collins@XYarius.com
Ignore the reply address. To email me use the above address with the XY
removed.

Arius - A Signal Processing Solutions Company
Specializing in DSP and FPGA design URL http://www.arius.com
4 King Ave 301-682-7772 Voice
Frederick, MD 21701-3110 301-682-7666 FAX
 
rickman <spamgoeshere4@yahoo.com> writes:
I think it is more interesting that this thread has been discussed for a
full day now and no one from Xilinx has commented. Especially when one
poster mentioned rumors of yield issues. I would expect Xilinx to be
jumping all over that if it were just a rumor.
Of course not! Yields are one of the most carefully guarded trade secrets
of semiconductor companies. The fact that a semi company doesn't talk
about yields, even to dispell a rumor, does not lend any credibility to
the rumor.
 
rickman wrote:
jerry1111 wrote:

Aye, but to be fair, how long has Cyclone been out now?

But you were able to buy small quantities early... not after
a year - IMHO.


I think it is more interesting that this thread has been discussed for a
full day now and no one from Xilinx has commented. Especially when one
poster mentioned rumors of yield issues. I would expect Xilinx to be
jumping all over that if it were just a rumor.

I have had an email from someone at Xilinx; they will be available from
distributors in the new year.

Leon
--
Leon Heller, G1HSM
Email: aqzf13@dsl.pipex.com
My low-cost Philips LPC210x ARM development system:
http://www.geocities.com/leon_heller/lpc2104.html
 
This thread pretends that availability and yield are just a yes/no issue.
Let me assure you that it is not.
Our industry is very aggressive (and very successful) in pushing
barely-proven technology into volume production. Naturally, the yield at
first is not as good as it will be after a while. If it were, we would be
accused of not being aggressive enough.
I am not aware of any Spartan3-specific problems, but it does not surprise
me that availability is not perfect yet. The important thing is that the
design works, which it does! Yield has traditionally ALWAYS been improved
with a bit of hard work.
(I could cite hundreds of examples from my almost four decades in this
industry...)

Now you have my personal and honest opinion, don't read anything complicated
or devious into it.
Peter Alfke



rickman wrote:

jerry1111 wrote:

Aye, but to be fair, how long has Cyclone been out now?

But you were able to buy small quantities early... not after
a year - IMHO.

I think it is more interesting that this thread has been discussed for a
full day now and no one from Xilinx has commented. Especially when one
poster mentioned rumors of yield issues. I would expect Xilinx to be
jumping all over that if it were just a rumor.

--

Rick "rickman" Collins

rick.collins@XYarius.com
Ignore the reply address. To email me use the above address with the XY
removed.

Arius - A Signal Processing Solutions Company
Specializing in DSP and FPGA design URL http://www.arius.com
4 King Ave 301-682-7772 Voice
Frederick, MD 21701-3110 301-682-7666 FAX
 
Leon Heller wrote:
I have had an email from someone at Xilinx; they will
be available from distributors in the new year.
More completely: "Open for order entry end December 03.
Orders will then go on allocation."

And that is for pretty big volumes ;-) I guess the PR
people don't like to confuse a good story with
inconvenient information.
 
I have had an email from someone at Xilinx; they will be available from
distributors in the new year.
Same to me: Insight Italy says some samples of XC3S200-4TQ144 could be
available early next year.
 
Not sure what you mean -- asking "how long have them been out" makes my
point. They're out. You can get them. Now. None of this monkey business
about "maybe sometime next year in the first or second quarter. Maybe."

My schedules can't revolve around when Xilinx may or may not decide to grant
me the privelege of being able to actually acquire some of their parts.


"Nial Stewart" <nial@nialstewartdevelopments.co.uk> wrote in message
news:3fe2ee7d$0$30928$fa0fcedb@lovejoy.zen.co.uk...
Patrick MacGregor <patrickmacgregor@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:u6CdnY2YoIl05X-iRVn-uw@comcast.com...
Hate to say it, but this is why I use Altera. I can get Cyclones --
today.
And their free tools support the entire family.


Aye, but to be fair, how long has Cyclone been out now?


Nial (with no real preference between A or X).

------------------------------------------------
Nial Stewart Developments Ltd
FPGA and High Speed Digital Design
www.nialstewartdevelopments.co.uk
 
Key words here are "some" and "could".

Having used FPGAs since they were first introduced, I can safely say that in
nearly every case, X or A parts will do the job. Only in very rare
instances does one product have a clear, definitive advantage over the
other.

So when choosing to use one vendor over the other, it usually boils down to
personal preference.

For the life of me, I cannot understand why anyone on this thread would
prefer to be treated the way X is treating them. Do all your projects and
products have such open-ended schedules that you can deal with the moving
target of availability that X keeps forcing you to accept?

If you choose to use parts from X, you shouldn't complain about the way they
treat you -- this is hardly the first time they've behaved this way. Caused
me to switch allegiance to A and never look back or regret it, and more
importantly to never miss a production schedule due to them not having parts
many, many months after they advertised that they would be available.

"Antonio Pasini" <NOSPAM_pasini.a@tin.it> wrote in message
news:OZKEb.16659$wM.1258532@news1.tin.it...
I have had an email from someone at Xilinx; they will be available from
distributors in the new year.


Same to me: Insight Italy says some samples of XC3S200-4TQ144 could be
available early next year.
 
Patrick MacGregor wrote:
For the life of me, I cannot understand why anyone on this thread
would prefer to be treated the way X is treating them. Do all your
projects and products have such open-ended schedules that you can
deal with the moving target of availability that X keeps forcing you
to accept?
Good point, but the Spartan3 is a pretty terrific part for
many applications. It's like dating the girl with naturally
curly hair - more trouble, but worth it.
 
For the life of me, I cannot understand why anyone on this thread would
prefer to be treated the way X is treating them. Do all your projects and
products have such open-ended schedules that you can deal with the moving
target of availability that X keeps forcing you to accept?
To me, X has always delivered. Very good technical support. Good presence
here on newsgroup.
Good price. Insight Italy never missed a delivery, after a careful planning
of orders.
That's matters to me.

Never tried A, though.

Tight schedule ? I'd use Spartan II, as I'm doing now (2003 project, and
future update in 2004).
I'm very happy with them.

What I'm now thinking about is what I'll put on production on 2005.
So I feel confident I can consider Spartan 3, also.

Announcing parts early actually helps: I can start designing my system NOW.
In any case, I wouldn't even try to load the design on actual HW as long as
I'm not completely satisfied on simulation results.

But I acknowledge I'm perhaps a lucky guy: I have the luxury to plan in
advance for upgrades or new designs.
 

Welcome to EDABoard.com

Sponsor

Back
Top