16
The 8086/8088 has an internal 20-bit address bus and 16-bit data bus. Externally, the address bus is 20-bits, and the data bus is 16-bits for the 8086 and 8-bits for the 8088.The data bus in the 8086 is 16 bits in size, while the address bus is 20.
There are 16 data lines in 8086.
It is my understanding that the 80286 has a 16-bit data bus. This was a doubling of the original 8086/8088 processors.
The address bus in the 8085 is 16 bits wide.
queue of 8086 microprocessor is 6 bits
Because the accumulator and primary data path is 16 bits. Also, that how Intel designed it.
The data bus in the 8086 is 16 bits in size, while the address bus is 20 (16bits would only address 64KB of memory, an extra 4 bits allows to address the total of 1MB, this is done trough segmentation of the memory). To form a multiplexed of data bus and address bus, four bits of 8086 address bus are grounded.
8086 is a 16bit processor.
8086 has 20 address lines. Therefore it can address 220 bits or 1,048,576 bits of memory, or roughly 1 MB (mega byte).
group of wires or lines that are used to transfer adress between microprocesssor and i/o devices one way and of 20 bits while data bus uses bothway transfer of data between microprocessor and i/o devices of 16 bits
The external data bus can be as wide as desired, given the necessary compromises between performance, complexity, and cost. The wider the bus, the faster the theoretical aggregate data transfer rate. In the 8085 and 8088, the external data bus is 8 bits wide; in the 8086, it is 16 bits wide; in the 80386, it is 32 bits wide; and in the modern incarnations of 64 bit processors, it is 64 bits wide.
32 bits.