

🚀 Elevate your FPGA game with the Nexys A7-100T — where power meets portability!
The Digilent Nexys A7-100T is a compact, USB-powered FPGA trainer board featuring the powerful Artix-7 XC7A100T chip with over 85,000 logic slices, 4,860 Kbits of fast block RAM, and internal clock speeds surpassing 450 MHz. Designed for ECE curricula and professional prototyping, it offers a perfect balance of performance, portability, and affordability, making it a top choice for millennial engineers and developers eager to innovate on the go.






| ASIN | B0714MKJ4H |
| Best Sellers Rank | #717 in Computer Motherboards |
| Brand | Digilent |
| Color | green |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (44) |
| Date First Available | August 22, 2013 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Dimensions LxWxH | 8 x 1 x 6 inches |
| Item Weight | 8.4 ounces |
| Item model number | 410-292 |
| Manufacturer | Digilent |
| Memory Speed | 450 MHz |
| Number of Processors | 4 |
| Number of USB 2.0 Ports | 4 |
| Operating System | Linux |
| Power Source | See product details |
| Processor Brand | ARM |
| Product Dimensions | 8 x 1 x 6 inches |
| RAM | DDR2 |
| Series | Nexys A7-100T |
| Wireless Type | Bluetooth |
B**N
Exactly what it supposed to be
This board is exactly what it’s supposed to be… the Ethernet will have some limitations due to the type of phy they use, so selecting the right IP in Vivado is important if you’re using it with a MicroBlaze
D**K
Neat little board
(I just started using the board. I will update the review if I find anything wrong with it.) I've been using a Genesys 2 board for a couple of months for a project, but I wanted to get something smaller and cheaper. The Genesys 2 is too large to carry around, and it also requires an external power supply. This board is much smaller, and it is powered off USB. The cost is important because I do not want to carry a $1k FPGA board around, and I also want to be able to share my design with others who cannot afford the more expensive board. I really like the simplicity of this board. The Gensys 2 is a very powerful and flexible board, but that power comes at a cost: it requires an external power supply, and it is not supported by the free version of Vivado. I will continue using the Genesys 2 as my primary (desktop) development board, but I am also really excited to have this neat little board. The one thing I wish was improved: the VGA port really should support 16b color. RGB565 is a very common color format. RGB444 is a bit ugly. WIth the heatsink installed, the demo project brings the temperature up to 43C (measured by XADC on the chip), so I would recommend installing a heatsink. The attached picture shows this board next to the Genesys 2. Also, I think it's really amazing that I can order an FPGA board from Digilent off Amazon and have it arrive the next day.
A**R
Great
Product met all requirements
B**N
Pretty nice and capable FPGA.
The FPGA is fairly capable, and has the ports needed to implement a basic SBC or similar via a soft-core processor (without needing to connect up a bunch of stuff via PMod). The clock speeds it can achieve are pretty similar to those on the Arty boards and similar; I am able to get a CPU core running at 50MHz (or 100MHz with a fair bit of futzing). I am working on a prototype for a custom ISA/CPU of mine targeting this board, which is a 64-bit RISC style ISA with 3-execute lanes (explicitly parallel), and a double-precision FPU and MMU; also has enough Block-RAM to have 128K of L2 cache and 128K of video memory; ... One drawback though is that it has a smaller DDR RAM module than the Arty boards (128MB vs 256MB). Can also note that the "case" it comes with is essentially an extra-thick padded DVD holder (can be used to hold the board when not in use), rather than, say, something where one can mount the board and still have access to the ports and similar (kinda need something like this).
B**N
Exactly what it says it is, no more no less
It’s exactly what it says it is. My warning for everyone, this is for people who know what they’re doing. What I mean about that is the box doesn’t come with instructions at all, doesn’t tell you what to download or any basics. It’s not hard to figure out, download Vivado and the datasheet is online, but it would be nice If it came with at least a link to that info
S**A
look good.
I would buy this board if it has SD card adaptor for boot loader.
G**Y
Bringing VHDL to life
Had to buy this for school project, but honestly this thing really shows the power and ability of FPGAs vs micro processors. Worth the investment if you want to gain a deeper understanding of logic design
T**N
Good Product
Pretty much as expected, needed it for a class and it lasted the entire semester with no issues.
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