jds wrote:
I just looked up the ROR bug as I was curious how bad it was. The ROR instruction was present in the early 6502's, it just worked incorrectly. So the quick fix was to take the instruction out of the manual. And it looks like it was pretty bad, including shifting left rather than right. That's probably just some errors in the microcode PROM, so easily fixed with a chip revision, which they did quite quickly.
I think for the collectors of such things a ceramic 6502 is worth more than a plastic one, and a white ceramic one is worth a lot. This is probably mainly for Apple I collectors where I think they must have used white ceramic 6502's in a lot of the originals. If you every see an old, dead, 6502 computer and it has a white ceramic 6502, it would be well worth salvaging for the 6502 alone. White ceramic 6502's sell for thousands of dollars.
And there are apparently 3 versions of the white ceramic 6502, with different ground layouts.
It might be worth doing some research into your 6502 to see exactly how rare it is.
Thanks for your thoughts. Mine is the MOS white ceramic 6502 brand new. I own an Apple 1 also with a white ceramic 6502 in it but certainly note date code 3675. I don't want to fiddle with my Apple 1 and somehow screw it up. It works nicely and I want to keep it that way. It's #91 on the registry