Claims
- 1. A regenerative repeater circuit comprising:
a clocked sense amplifier; and a driver circuit enabled by the sense amplifier, the driver circuit being a push-pull driver circuit driving a pair of differential lines, one line driven high while the other line is pulled low.
- 2. The repeater circuit as claimed in claim 1 wherein the driver circuit comprises a data-line-to-data-line precharge circuit that shares charge between the data lines to a midpoint of voltage swing on the data lines.
- 3. A repeater circuit as claimed in claim 1 wherein the driver circuit is an H-bridge, one line being driven high by a leg of the H as the other line is pulled low by a diagonal leg of the bridge.
- 4. A repeater circuit as claimed in claim 1 wherein the sense amplifier is gate isolated.
- 5. A repeater circuit as claimed in claim 1 formed of MOSFETs.
- 6. A repeater circuit as claimed in claim 1 wherein each line is driven through a low swing.
- 7. A method of repeating a data signal comprising:
sensing the data signal in a clocked sense amplifier; and from the output of the sense amplifier enabling a driver circuit which repeats the signal received at the sense amplifier, the driver circuit being a push-pull driver circuit driving a pair of differential lines, one line driven high while the other line is pulled low.
- 8. A method as claimed in claim 7 further comprising precharging the differential lines through a data-line-to-data-line precharge circuit in the driver circuit that shares charge between the data lines to a midpoint of voltage swing on the data lines.
- 9. A method as claimed in claim 7 wherein each of the differential lines is driven through a low swing.
- 10. A regenerative repeater circuit comprising:
clocked sense amplifier means for sensing a received signal; and driver means enabled by the sense amplifier means for driving the sensed signal on an output line.
RELATED APPLICATION(S)
[0001] This application is a Continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 09/625,650, filed Jul. 26, 2000, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/198,188, filed Apr. 19, 2000, the entire teachings of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Provisional Applications (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
|
60198188 |
Apr 2000 |
US |
Continuations (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09625650 |
Jul 2000 |
US |
Child |
10172535 |
Jun 2002 |
US |