Dr Jefyll wrote:
Welcome, Davegsm1982
With luck, perhaps someone will be able to help. But your request seems a bit confusing (to me, at least). First of all, I didn't realize the Keypad/Display was actually a separate PCB until I took a closer look at the photo in the lead
post.
Also, you mention "6502/68000 trainer systems," and, "as far as I know they're the same board." But do you perhaps mean 6800 (rather than 68000)? And, it might be helpful if we knew what the 6800/68000 system is called. (I'm assuming it doesn't have the same name -- Digiac 2000 MAC-III.) Cheers!
-- Jeff
Hi Jeff, Thanks for the welcome.
Yea, the 2 boards were separate, and as far as I know you could use some terminal software to upload code to the main board via RS232 and not bother having the keypad/LED display so it was sort of optional, but I never once used RS232. Everything was manually and labouriously entered on the keypad.
I'm hoping someone will be able to oblige as I used this system when I was in school and I really want to get it going again. I have all the parts to populate a display/KB PCB but I can't find any good photos of the rear so I can't begin to reverse engineer it. The display IC is self explanatory but I don't know how the keypad is multiplexed.
So yea, there were (to the best of my knowlege) 3x DIGIAC Microprocessor trainer systems;
6502 - MAC-III
Motorola 68000 - 'TIM 68000'
Z80 - Not sure.
I used the 6502 a lot and did a small amount of work on the 68000. I absolutely adored playing with the 6502 which prepared me well for when I started programming PIC microcontrollers with assembler.
Regards, Dave.
EDIT: Just realised, when I said 'they're the same board' I meant the display/Keypad is the same board shared across the 3 microprocessor trainer systems. Sorry for the confusion.