Sega Hikaru
From Sega Retro
Sega Hikaru | |||||
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Manufacturer: Sega | |||||
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The Sega Hikaru is a successor of the Sega NAOMI and Sega Model 3 arcade systems that was developed in 1998 and debuted in 1999. The Hikaru was used for a handful of deluxe dedicated-cabinet games, beginning with 1999's Brave Fire Fighters, in which the flame and water effects were largely a showpiece for the hardware.
It was significantly more powerful and expensive than the NAOMI. The Hikaru featured a custom Sega GPU with advanced graphical capabilities, additional CPU and sound processors, various custom processors, increased memory, and faster bandwidth. It was the first game platform capable of effective hardware Phong shading and was capable of the most complex lighting and particle effects of its time.
It was the most powerful game system of its time, but very expensive. Since it was comparatively expensive to produce, Sega soon abandoned the Hikaru in favor of continued NAOMI development. It was succeeded by the NAOMI 2, which was not as powerful, but more affordable.
Contents
Development
According to Sega in 1999: [1]
“ | Brave Firefighters utilizes a slightly modified Naomi Hardware system called Hikaru. Hikaru incorporates a custom Sega graphics chip and possesses larger memory capacity then standard Naomi systems. "These modifications were necessary because in Brave Firefighters, our engineers were faced with the daunting challenge of creating 3d images of flames and sprayed water," stated Sega's Vice President of Sales and Marketing, Barbara Joyiens. "If you stop and think about it, both have an almost infinite number of shapes, sizes, colors, levels of opaqueness, shadings and shadows. And, when you combine the two by simulating the spraying of water on a flame, you create an entirely different set of challenges for our game designers and engineers to overcome; challenges that would be extremely difficult, if not impossible to overcome utilizing existing 3D computers. Hikaru has the horsepower to handle these demanding graphic challenges with clarity, depth and precision." | „ |
In addition, the Hikaru also uses two Hitachi SH-4 CPU processors, two Yamaha AICA sound engine processors, a Motorola 68000 network CPU, and a dual GPU setup. The Hikaru hardware was largely complete in 1998, before it was released to the public in 1999. [2]
Specifications
- Board composition: Main Board, ROM Board, AICA Sound Board, I/O Board, Filter Board, Network Board [2]
- Operating systems:
- Sega native operating system
- Custom Windows CE, with DirectX 6.0, Direct3D and OpenGL support
- Extensions: communication, 4‑channel surround audio, PCI, MIDI, RS‑232C
- Connection: JAMMA Video compliant, VGA
Main Processors
- Main CPU: 2× Hitachi SH‑4 @ 200 MHz [5]
- Units: 2× 128‑bit SIMD vector units with graphic functions, 2× 64‑bit floating‑point units, 2× 32‑bit fixed‑point units
- Bus width: 256‑bit (2× 128‑bit) internal, 128‑bit (2× 64‑bit) external
- Bandwidth: 6.4 GB/s internal processing, 3.2 GB/s external bus
- Fixed‑point performance: 720 MIPS
- Floating‑point performance: 2.8 GFLOPS (7 MFLOPS per 16 MB/s processing)
- Geometry performance: More than 20 million polygons/sec geometry & lighting calculations (140 FLOPS per lit polygon)
- Note: With Sega Custom 3D GPU geometry processors, the SH‑4's 128‑bit SIMD matrix unit can be dedicated to game physics, artificial intelligence, collision detection, overall game code, and/or further enhancing graphics.
- MIE bridge MCU: Sega 315‑6146 Maple‑JVS MCU (Zilog Z80) [6][7] @ 14.7456 MHz [2] (8/16‑bit instructions, 8‑bit bus, 2.14 MIPS)
- Memory controllers: 2× Sega 315‑6154 Memory Controller @ 200 MHz (2× 32‑bit, DMA capabilities) [3][2][8]
- Network Board processors: [2]
- ROM Board processors: [2]
Sound
- Sound engine: 2× Yamaha AICA Super Intelligent Sound Processor (315‑6232) @ 67 MHz
- Internal CPU: 2× 32‑bit ARM7 RISC CPU @ 45 MHz
- CPU performance: 34 MIPS (2× 17 MIPS)
- PCM/ADPCM: 16‑bit depth, 48 kHz sampling rate (DVD quality), 128 channels
- Bus width: 32‑bit (2× 16‑bit)
- Other features: DSP, sound synthesizer
Graphics
The Sega Hikaru uses custom 3D graphics hardware, which include the following specifications: [12][13][3]
- Graphics Engine GPU: Sega Custom 3D GPU @ 250 MHz
- Core units: 34 units (7 processors, 27 compute units)
- Bus width: 1872‑bit internal, 704‑bit external
- GPU core processors: 7 processors [2][14]
- 2× Sega GPU 15 Command Processors (315‑6197) @ 250 MHz: 512‑bit (2× 256‑bit) internal, 128‑bit (2× 64‑bit) external, Geometry Processor
- Sega GPU 1A Image Generator (315‑6087) @ 250 MHz: 128‑bit, rasterizer/renderer [15]
- 2× Sega GPU DMA controllers (315‑6084) @ 250 MHz: 256‑bit (2× 128‑bit), texture processors
- 2× Analog Devices ADV7120 Video DAC @ 80 MHz: 48‑bit (2× 24‑bit) [16]
- GPU compute units: 27 units, 928‑bit, 25 GB/sec processing [2][14]
- 2× Sega PAL (Lattice GAL16V8) GAL @ 250 MHz: 16 units (2× 8 units), 128‑bit (2× 64‑bit), DMA control, graphics processing,[17] 4 GB/sec
- Sega 315‑6083A, 315‑6085, 315‑6086 @ 250 MHz: 3 units, 384‑bit (3× 128‑bit), 12 GB/sec
- Sega 315‑6202 (Lattice CY37128) CPLD @ 167 MHz: 8 units, 416‑bit internal (8× 52‑bit), 128‑bit external (8× 16‑bit),[18] 9 GB/sec
- GPU Geometry Processors: 2× Sega GPU 15 Command Processors
- Hardware T&L: Transform, clipping, lighting
- Materials: Flat shading, Gouraud shading, Phong shading, diffuse, ambient, specular, unlit
- Fog: Color, transparency, density, depth blend, translucency
- Rendering: Double‑buffered 3D rendering (odd & even frames), depth cueing, depth buffer, depth bias, face culling, static meshes, dynamic meshes
- Shading: Flat shading, Gouraud shading, Phong shading, diffuse, ambient, specular, linear
- Modelview matrix: Instanced drawing, multiple instances, shared attributes between models,[19] modelview stack
- Object memory: 8 viewports, 256 modelviews, 16,384 materials (256 LOD levels), 16,384 textures/texheads (256 LOD levels), 1024 lights (256 light sets)
- GPU texture processors: 2× Sega GPU DMA controllers
- GPU IDMA (Indirect DMA) controller: Loads texture data from MaskROM (via external bus) into texture banks (with metadata), allows CPU access to texture banks
- DMA controller: Moves textures around in framebuffer, transfers bitmap data to bitmap layers, allows CPU access to framebuffer
- Texture banks: 2 texture banks (stored as 2× 2048×1024 sheets), stores textures from MaskROM (with 16‑byte metadata per texture in Command RAM)
- Texturing capabilities: 16×16 to 512×512 texture sizes, mipmapping, mipmap trees, texture panning, multi‑texturing, bump mapping, texture filtering, bilinear filtering, trilinear filtering, environment mapping [20]
- Color depth: 32‑bit ARGB, 16,777,216 colors (24‑bit color) with 8‑bit (256 levels) alpha blending, YUV and RGB color space, color key overlay
- Display resolution: 31 kHz horizontal sync, 60 Hz refresh rate, 80 MHz Video DAC, JAMMA/VGA output, progressive scan [2][16]
- Single monitor display: 496×384 to 800×608 (default 640×480)
- Dual monitor display: 992×384 to 1600×608 (default 1280×480)
- Video output: 496×384 to 1968×1080 (default 640×480)
- Framebuffer: 496×384 to 2048×2048 (default 2048×2048) [2]
- Lighting: 1024 lights per scene, 4 lights per polygon, 256 light sets per scene (4 lights per set), 8 window surfaces
- Light types: Diffuse, ambient, specular, horizontal, spot
- Emission types: Constant, linear, infinite linear, square, reciprocal, reciprocal squared
- Object types: Lights (with individual position, direction and emission properties), lightsets (a set of up to 4 lights that share a mesh)
- Framebuffer: 2048×2048 sheet (can be partitioned into framebuffer, tile data, and/or 1‑2 bitmap layers), handled by 2 GPU 1A Image Generator rasterizers/renderers (double‑buffering), accessible by DMA controller
- Rendering units: Up to 28 units (Image Generator, 27 compute units)
- Geometry computation: [13]
- Processing bandwidth: 47.4 GB/s (16 GB/s Command Processors, 25 GB/s compute units, 6.4 GB/s SH‑4)
- Floating‑point operations: 20.7375 GFLOPS (7 GFLOPS per 16 GB/s processing)
- Geometry performance: [13]
- Rendering fillrate:
- 16-bit color: 4 billion pixels/texels per sec (8 GB/s texture bandwidth)
- 24-bit color: 2.6 billion pixels/texels per sec
- Other effects: Stencil, shadows, motion blur, particle effects, fire effects, water effects,[1] fog, alpha blending, anti‑aliasing, specular effects [20]
- Other capabilities: 2 bitmap layers, calendar, 16,384 vertices per mesh [23]
Memory
- Memory: Up to 465 MB [24]
- Main memory: 130 MB (64 MB RAM, 66 MB ROM)
- Video memory: 286.25 MB (30.25 MB RAM, 256 MB ROM)
- Sound memory: 48 MB (16 MB RAM, 32 MB ROM)
- Other memory: 480 KB (384 KB RAM, 96 KB cache)
- RAM: 110.625 MB [8][2]
- ROM: Up to 354 MB
- Cache: 96 KB (48 KB per SH‑4 CPU) [32]
Bandwidth
- Internal processor bandwidth: [2]
- SH‑4 cache: 6.4 GB/s (256‑bit, 200 MHz)
- Sega Custom 3D GPU: 49.5 GB/s (1872‑bit)
- Command Processors: 16 GB/s (512‑bit, 250 MHz)
- Image Generator: 4 GB/s (128‑bit, 250 MHz)
- Texture DMA controllers: 8 GB/s (256‑bit, 250 MHz)
- DAC: 480 MB/sec (48‑bit, 80 MHz) [16]
- Computation units: 25 GB/sec (928‑bit, 250 MHz)
- AICA Sound Processor: 268 MB/sec (32‑bit, 67 MHz)
- Z80 MIE MCU: 15 MB/sec (8‑bit, 14.7456 MHz)
- 315‑6154 Memory Controllers: 1.6 GB/s (64‑bit, 200 MHz)
- ROM Board PLD: 1.45 GB/s (2× 32‑bit, 180/182 MHz)
- Network Board 68000: 80 MB/sec (16‑bit, 40 MHz)
- Network Board FPGA: 720 MB/sec (32‑bit, 180 MHz) [9]
- RAM/ROM memory bandwidth: 26.311 GB/s (22.311 GB/s RAM, 4 GB/s ROM)
- Main memory: 6.4 GB/s (2.4 GB/s RAM, 4 GB/s ROM)
- Video memory: 24 GB/s (20 GB/s RAM, 4 GB/s ROM)
- Sound memory: 268 MB/sec
- Other memory: 443 MB/sec
- RAM bandwidth: 22.311 GB/s [2]
- Main RAM: 2.4 GB/s (192‑bit, 100 MHz, 6 ns) [25]
- SH‑4: 1.6 GB/s (128‑bit)
- Memory Controllers: 800 MB/sec (64‑bit)
- VRAM: 20 GB/s (704‑bit, 4.5 ns)
- Sound RAM: 268 MB/sec (2× 16‑bit, 67 MHz, 6 ns) [33]
- HM62256 SRAM: 193 MB/sec (72‑bit, 45 ns) [28]
- MIE RAM: 15 MB/sec (8‑bit, 14.7456 MHz)
- Backup RAM: 44.444444 MB/sec (16‑bit, 22.222222 MHz)
- Network Board RAM: 133.333333 MB/sec (48‑bit, 22.222222 MHz)
- ROM Board RAM: 250 MB/sec (16‑bit, 125 MHz, 8 ns) [29]
- Main RAM: 2.4 GB/s (192‑bit, 100 MHz, 6 ns) [25]
- ROM bandwidth: 4 GB/s [2]
Hardware Images
List of Games
- Brave FireFighters (1999)
- NASCAR Arcade (2000)
- Planet Harriers (2000)
- Star Wars Racer Arcade (2000)
- Air Trix (2001)
- Cyber Troopers Virtual-On Force (2001)
- Cyber Troopers Virtual-On Force Ver.7.7 (2002)
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Originating in arcades |
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