Hi,
In section 5.11.3.11 on page 136, Table 5-36, row 2, the following line can be found:
"CK A to B/A to C Skew Length Mismatch-------------------- MAX: 25 Mils"
1. What in the world is "skew length mismatch"? I'm sorry, I'm fairly new to PCB design, and I asked about 10 professors from my own and other relevant institutes, and no one could provide me with an exact answer.
I mean, the most intuitive interpretation would be: "The CLKP and CLKN signal routes should not vary more than 25mils in length", but I really don't know if that's a correct interpretation because it does not try to explain what in the world "CK A to B/A to C" is supposed to mean.
2. I don't even have two DDR2 ICs, only one, so that entire balanced T thing is not really applicable in my case. Any thoughts?
3. What exactly is the datasheet talking about when referring to "segments". If I only have one DDR2 IC, and only segment A and B aplies, then does that mean I can only have ONE turn/corner for that exact signal route? Because if I have more corners, then I'd have more than two segments..no?
4. What is meant by "nominal trace length" on row 5? I understand "trace length" but not when it has an added "nominal" before it.
5. On row 1 the Datasheet is referring to CK-CKN.. Correct me if I'm wrong, but CK is a signal net CLASS that consists of PIN NAMES DDR_CLKP and DDR_CLKN(active low). So, according to those definitions, when I see "CK-CKN" I automatically assume that there is ANOTHER CLASS called CKN, since CK is a class. Then when I don't find it I get frustrated. Is the Datasheet trying to refer to the signals running out of the DDR_CLKP and DDR_CLKN pins? In that case why is it not consistent? Seriously, consistency in documents like these should be treated with high importance. You can't just pull out a "CKN" out of nowhere and expect people(beginners) not to be confused. Or is incosistent labeling like this just a part of the game within this field? Or is the standard just to not annotate the Positive signal in a class consisting of only two signals, and just use the entire class name for the positive signal? That is not a very impressive standard.
Sorry for the tone on Q5, just a bit of frustration I needed to get out :)
Anyway, I'd appreciate any help I can get on this. Thanks in advance!