Intersil Intercept Models...

Allison ajp166 at bellatlantic.net
Wed Sep 10 19:00:24 CDT 2008


>
>Subject: Intersil Intercept Models...
>   From: "Bob Armstrong" <bob at jfcl.com>
>   Date: Wed, 10 Sep 2008 07:39:24 -0700
>     To: "'General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts'"	<cctalk at classiccmp.org>
>
>   Intersil made several PDP-8 "work a likes" based on their 6100 chip, and
>I'm trying to figure out a few of the exact details.  OK, I know this is
>really obscure, but I'm hoping somebody out there has used one or at least
>seen one :-)
>
>  The Intercept Jr was the SYM or KIM like single board computer with a
>chiclet keypad and seven segment displays and powered by D cells.  That
>one's easy to identify.  However, after they bought out Intersil, Harris
>made a thing called the "Micro12" which was a little like the Intercept Jr
>but is clearly not the same.  There are no D cells on the Micro12 for one
>thing, and more logic on board for another.  I only have pictures of the
>Micro12, but no details.  Does anybody know any more about this gizmo?

There was a 6100 sampler that was a minimal board with TTY interface.
I have one of those.

The Intercept-JR did have batteries, it was one of the features all cmos
and low power. Fun to play with and useful.  The Micro12 was the same beast
from memory.


If I could find details on the -JR I'd build one.


>  And the "Intercept I/II Microcomputer Development Manual" (which I do
>have) has pictures and specifications for the Intercept I and II.  The I is
>in a 3-1/2" chassis that holds four cards horizontally, and the II is a
>5-1/4" chassis that holds at least a dozen cards inserted vertically.  As
>far as I can determine from the manual, the I and II are the same (they use
>all the same cards) except for the chassis, and neither one has any kind of
>front panel.  The front panel is emulated with an ODT like debugger in the
>console firmware (a little like the LSI-11).
>


The Intercept1 was 6100 based and the InterceptII was 6120  basically the same 
thing from the programmers view with minor differnce.  The I used 6100/6102
(PDP-8 with EMA) and the 6120 was the version that integreated the MEDIC part
on one chip and also added PDP-8A stack instrucitons (they are really IOTs).

The OS was OS278 flavor or compatable at some level with Fortran, FOCAL, ODT
and PAL. they also had the PDP-8 tray of tapes kit for non disk or user 
rolled software. The disk system was PDP-8 RX01/RX8E software compatable.

FYI: ODT is a PDP-8 creation that found it way to PDP-11 with some variation.

The DECmate (early plain and DM1) and the base Intercept systems have much 
in common.


>  BUT, I've also seen pictures of something that looks like an Intercept I
>(exact same chassis), but with a lights and switches front panel.  Intersil
>and Harris both published application notes, #006, that described the "6100
>Operator Console" and the application note even contains a nice photograph
>of just such a machine.  What model was this?  Is it a unique model, was
>there a front panel option for an Intercept I?  The Intercept manual says
>nothing about any kind of front panel.

There were flavors of the backplane for turnkey systems without the front
pannel (I think power and reset).  The other flavor had the operators console 
(front panel) that was supported with the needed rom and pannel ram. You 
could also get the operators console for the bare backplane version.


>  Also, Intersil had their own disk (floppy disk, that is) operating system
>for the Intercept I/II called IFDOS.  I have a manual for IFDOS, but it
>doesn't describe the floppy disk hardware for the Intercept.  Was it a clone
>of the RX01/RX8E?  Have any copies of IFDOS media survived?

Yep RX8E based system media and software compatable though differnt internally.


The Sampler is very minimal but fun to expand, the Intercept-JR is on my wish 
list and the Intercept-1 or II were scarce but wouldn't mind having one to go
with my PDP-8f, DMIII systems.


Allison

>
>Thanks!
>Bob Armstrong
>



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