The SN74GTLPH306 is a medium-drive, 8-bit bus transceiver that provides LVTTL-to-GTLP and
GTLP-to-LVTTL signal-level translation. The device provides a high-speed interface between cards operating
at LVTTL logic levels and a backplane operating at GTLP signal levels. High-speed (about three times faster
than standard LVTTL or TTL) backplane operation is a direct result of GTLP's reduced output swing (<1 V),
reduced input threshold levels, improved differential input, OEC circuitry, and TI-OPC circuitry. Improved
GTLP OEC and TI-OPC circuits minimize bus-settling time and have been designed and tested using several
backplane models. The medium drive allows incident-wave switching in heavily loaded backplanes with
equivalent load impedance down to 19 .
GTLP is the Texas Instruments (TI) derivative of the Gunning Transceiver Logic (GTL) JEDEC standard
JESD 8-3. The ac specification of the SN74GTLPH306 is given only at the preferred higher-noise-margin GTLP,
but the user has the flexibility of using this device at either GTL (VTT = 1.2 V and VREF = 0.8 V) or GTLP
(VTT = 1.5 V and VREF = 1 V) signal levels.
Normally, the B port operates at GTLP signal levels. The A-port and control inputs operate at LVTTL logic levels,
but are 5-V tolerant and are compatible with TTL and 5-V CMOS inputs. VREF is the B-port differential input
reference voltage.
This device is fully specified for hot-insertion applications using Ioff and power-up 3-state. The Ioff circuitry
disables the outputs, preventing damaging current backflow through the device when it is powered down. The
power-up 3-state circuitry places the outputs in the high-impedance state during power up and power down,
which prevents driver conflict.
This GTLP device features TI-OPC circuitry, which actively limits overshoot caused by improperly terminated
backplanes, unevenly distributed cards, or empty slots during low-to-high signal transitions. This improves
signal integrity, which allows adequate noise margin to be maintained at higher frequencies.
Active bus-hold circuitry holds unused or undriven LVTTL data inputs at a valid logic state. Use of pullup or
pulldown resistors with the bus-hold circuitry is not recommended.
When VCC is between 0 and 1.5 V, the device is in the high-impedance state during power up or power down.
However, to ensure the high-impedance state above 1.5 V, the output-enable (OE\) input should be tied to VCC
through a pullup resistor; the minimum value of the resistor is determined by the current-sinking capability of
the driver.
The SN74GTLPH306 is a medium-drive, 8-bit bus transceiver that provides LVTTL-to-GTLP and
GTLP-to-LVTTL signal-level translation. The device provides a high-speed interface between cards operating
at LVTTL logic levels and a backplane operating at GTLP signal levels. High-speed (about three times faster
than standard LVTTL or TTL) backplane operation is a direct result of GTLP's reduced output swing (<1 V),
reduced input threshold levels, improved differential input, OEC circuitry, and TI-OPC circuitry. Improved
GTLP OEC and TI-OPC circuits minimize bus-settling time and have been designed and tested using several
backplane models. The medium drive allows incident-wave switching in heavily loaded backplanes with
equivalent load impedance down to 19 .
GTLP is the Texas Instruments (TI) derivative of the Gunning Transceiver Logic (GTL) JEDEC standard
JESD 8-3. The ac specification of the SN74GTLPH306 is given only at the preferred higher-noise-margin GTLP,
but the user has the flexibility of using this device at either GTL (VTT = 1.2 V and VREF = 0.8 V) or GTLP
(VTT = 1.5 V and VREF = 1 V) signal levels.
Normally, the B port operates at GTLP signal levels. The A-port and control inputs operate at LVTTL logic levels,
but are 5-V tolerant and are compatible with TTL and 5-V CMOS inputs. VREF is the B-port differential input
reference voltage.
This device is fully specified for hot-insertion applications using Ioff and power-up 3-state. The Ioff circuitry
disables the outputs, preventing damaging current backflow through the device when it is powered down. The
power-up 3-state circuitry places the outputs in the high-impedance state during power up and power down,
which prevents driver conflict.
This GTLP device features TI-OPC circuitry, which actively limits overshoot caused by improperly terminated
backplanes, unevenly distributed cards, or empty slots during low-to-high signal transitions. This improves
signal integrity, which allows adequate noise margin to be maintained at higher frequencies.
Active bus-hold circuitry holds unused or undriven LVTTL data inputs at a valid logic state. Use of pullup or
pulldown resistors with the bus-hold circuitry is not recommended.
When VCC is between 0 and 1.5 V, the device is in the high-impedance state during power up or power down.
However, to ensure the high-impedance state above 1.5 V, the output-enable (OE\) input should be tied to VCC
through a pullup resistor; the minimum value of the resistor is determined by the current-sinking capability of
the driver.