Anyone actually built a computer?
Anyone actually built a computer?
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Discussion

Morningside

Original Poster:

24,143 posts

250 months

Saturday 20th February 2010
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I dont mean getting the parts form ebuyer and putting them in a box..I mean real hardcore soldering iron/wirewrap stuff.



jimmyjimjim

7,984 posts

259 months

Saturday 20th February 2010
quotequote all
Nope, but been tempted -

http://www.brielcomputers.com/

There's vintage spectrum kits out there still, and another couple of Altair replica kits, amongst others.

JB!

5,255 posts

201 months

Saturday 20th February 2010
quotequote all
LOL.

i've done the ebuyer thing.

was good craik!

Morningside

Original Poster:

24,143 posts

250 months

Saturday 20th February 2010
quotequote all
jimmyjimjim said:
Nope, but been tempted -

http://www.brielcomputers.com/

There's vintage spectrum kits out there still, and another couple of Altair replica kits, amongst others.
The Altiar looks fun.

I did look at the Apple 1 replica (still have the book here) but it was a bit of a swizz.
http://www.brielcomputers.com/replica1.html
Yes, I agree its functionally correct but the hardware should be close as well otherwise you may as well use a PC emulator and where is the fun in that?


Edited by Morningside on Saturday 20th February 23:29

jimmyjimjim

7,984 posts

259 months

Sunday 21st February 2010
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Taking that view, the original spectrum kit that is still available from a few sources is going to be the best bet.

I look at soldering projects from time to time; saw someone was trying to replicate an 8086 with transistors - that would be quite tempting if you could find everything else as well. BIG project, though.

annodomini2

6,959 posts

272 months

Sunday 21st February 2010
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Loads but I do work on Embedded systems.

But I'm guessing you're referring mainly to the early 80's desktops where some of the processor components are spread across the board.

Morningside

Original Poster:

24,143 posts

250 months

Sunday 21st February 2010
quotequote all
Yes. I am talking Z80 or 6502. I did some work in the late 80s on 8051 derived stuff and including the Basic chip version.
I also like to dabble in PIC chip stuff but I have some old boards floating about with 90's tech on them (ie CPU/RAM) and thought about 'converting' them into a workable computer. I may go the Z80 route as there is quite a number of assemblers for them.

ThatPhilBrettGuy

11,810 posts

261 months

Sunday 21st February 2010
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Loads in the past. Z80A's, 6502 and even a 68000 with dynamic ram and no memory controller. 5 (worth nothing in the real world) geek points to the first person who works out how that was done smile

tribbles

4,131 posts

243 months

Sunday 21st February 2010
quotequote all
I've done a couple of 6502 based machines, and a fair number of ARM boards (this is pre-microcontroller times - namely ARM2, ARM3 and ARM250 back in the mid-90s).

Somewhere in my cupboard I've got a wire-wrapped ARM3 that should be in a good state to be used - although due to a recent clear up of my loft, it's now a lot harder to find.

Microcontrollers take some of the fun out of it, but are a damn site easier to use.

Can't think of a solution for 68000, unless you used the video as DRAM refresh (which is what the BBC micro did). However, I skipped the 16-bit generation, and went straight from 8 to 32 bits smile

FamilyGuy

850 posts

211 months

Sunday 21st February 2010
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A Tangerine Computer Systems MicroTan 65. It came as a heap of components and a circuit board. No PSU - you find that for yourself. I still have it and it still works, although an 8 bit 6502 running at 750Mhz (yes, that's an K, not an M...) doesn't give my PC much competition.

Edited to fix error in the order of a magnitude of 3...

Edited by FamilyGuy on Sunday 21st February 17:51

ThatPhilBrettGuy

11,810 posts

261 months

Sunday 21st February 2010
quotequote all
FamilyGuy said:
A Tangerine Computer Systems MicroTan 65. It came as a heap of components and a circuit board. No PSU - you find that for yourself. I still have it and it still works, although an 8 bit 6502 running at 750Mhz (yes, that's an M, not a G...) doesn't give my PC much competition.
Bet that's a K not an M.

tribbles

4,131 posts

243 months

Sunday 21st February 2010
quotequote all
Would have to be a K.

FamilyGuy

850 posts

211 months

Sunday 21st February 2010
quotequote all
ThatPhilBrettGuy said:
FamilyGuy said:
A Tangerine Computer Systems MicroTan 65. It came as a heap of components and a circuit board. No PSU - you find that for yourself. I still have it and it still works, although an 8 bit 6502 running at 750Mhz (yes, that's an M, not a G...) doesn't give my PC much competition.
Bet that's a K not an M.
Arse - you're right. It is a K.

Zad

12,930 posts

257 months

Sunday 21st February 2010
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Loads. At school I built a total of 7 ZX81s (including my own) for people. Despite being 11, I was the only one they trusted to solder school's new computer, a Nascom II kit! I wire wrapped an 8085 single board thing too, and designed a 68000 ( I was given the cpu and memory) but ran out of cash to buy the copper clad and support chips. I would guess that you got around the refresh by creating sequenced memory access via interrupts?

I did start to build my own CPU with a bucketful of transistors and a reel of diodes from an amateur radio rally, but after a couple of hundred transistors I lost enthusiasm. After that, it was mainly embedded systems as "proper" computers just got way too fast and complicated for casual construction, needing multi-layer PCBs. I save that sort of thing for work smile

Ask yourself, what would you do with the Altair? They are huge buggers and don't do much.

Blue Meanie

73,668 posts

276 months

Sunday 21st February 2010
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Built ones for data transmitting buoys, that work with speedlan radios, and all that guff. Very dull.

paul.deitch

2,271 posts

278 months

Sunday 21st February 2010
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Haven't seen a 6502/Z80 mentioned for a long time. The joys of learning assembler codes and stack limits and interupt levels and entering it all byte by byte. Still it taught me a lot though.