OT: But for the vintage CPU guys: Intel 8008 clock
Ben
bfranchuk at jetnet.ab.ca
Wed Jul 8 05:10:24 CDT 2009
Philip Pemberton wrote:
> Ethan Dicks wrote:
>>> from the site "Every year [Len Bales] designs and builds a new
>>> clock. His
>>> 2006 clock runs on the classic Intel 8008 microprocessor. The design is
>>> definitely not for the faint of heart...
>>
>> Wow, that's a lot of breadboarding.
>
> I did roughly as much when I built up my 6502 board. If memory serves,
> I had a GAL16V8AQ PLD (address decoder), 28C64 EEPROM, and a RAM chip
> on one chunk of breadboard, a W65C02A (WDC CMOS 6502) on another, and
> a TI 16C550 UART on the third.
>
> I don't think I got the breadboarded version stable at much more than
> 2MHz, but the Eurocard version runs quite nicely at 10MHz, with a full
> complement of I/O cards (CPU/RAM/ROM, UART, SP0256A-AL2 speech
> synthesizer).
>
> I've never plucked up the courage to put a scope on the backplane,
> though. Phi-0 and Phi-2 are probably rather messy, and I suspect SEL0
> thru SEL3 aren't in much better shape...
>
> Schematics (hand drawn with a Rapidograph, no less!) are at
> http://www.philpem.me.uk/elec/6502/ if anyone wants to have a look.
>
> Ultimately, I got to the point where I could make it run EhBASIC and
> speak, then more or less ran out of things to do with it. At some
> point, I really should tie a MOS 6581 "SID" sound chip to the bus and
> see what happens... Or maybe a disk controller...
>
Well build it while you can get chips ... I was going to do CPLD
computer design, until I got a virus on my computer
and had to reinstall windows a few days ago. So I am back to TTL or
rather LS TTL since I can't get real TTL
from my favorite supplier - Unicorn Electronics. I may have to throw in
a few 74F283's or 7483's in to meet my
speed requirements on the increment/decrement data path. Here all I need
is a brain (optional) a pen and a pad of quad
paper and of course DATA sheets. Ben.
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