You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.Dismiss alert
Many popular MCUs lack built-in CAN FD-capable controllers, which limits the uptake of CAN FD in new products. There is an interesting IC that could help new hardware revisions or new designs adopt CAN FD without having to port an existing codebase to a new platform: TI TCAN4550 -- a single-chip CAN FD controller with a built-in 5 Mbps transceiver interfaced with the MCU via SPI:
It is also appealing price-wise, being available from DigiKey for $1.5 @ 1k pcs, which is comparable to a regular standalone CAN transceiver.
This is a very promising chip and it would be nice to have portable and reusable drivers for it here.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
As far as I know, for MCP2518FD there are no AEC-Q/ISO26262 qualified
options, which is likely to be a deal breaker for some high-integrity
systems.
TCAN4550-Q1 is functionally identical to TCAN4550 plus safety
qualifications.
Many popular MCUs lack built-in CAN FD-capable controllers, which limits the uptake of CAN FD in new products. There is an interesting IC that could help new hardware revisions or new designs adopt CAN FD without having to port an existing codebase to a new platform: TI TCAN4550 -- a single-chip CAN FD controller with a built-in 5 Mbps transceiver interfaced with the MCU via SPI:
It is also appealing price-wise, being available from DigiKey for $1.5 @ 1k pcs, which is comparable to a regular standalone CAN transceiver.
This is a very promising chip and it would be nice to have portable and reusable drivers for it here.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: