dwight wrote:
ChuckT wrote:
Briel Computers sells a Microkim which is a clone but you should have some handy soldering skills unless the preassembled and tested one is available.
They're not quit a KIM-1. They don't have the second 6530 equivalent.
They only have the one 6532.
One can run most code on them but I don't know if micro chess runs.
It might if he mapped the ram correctly.
If you had any application that needed the -003 I/O, it wouldn't work.
Dwight
If I remember the KIM schematic correctly, the second 6530's I/O was not connected to anything except the connector on the side of the board. Most code for the KIM-1 works fine but for some projects you have to change the code a little bit (for example, the clock that uses the 7-segment displays originally used the timer circuitry in the second 6530 so you have to change a couple of bytes to use the timer in the 6532).
Briel Computers also sold a board that added a second 6532 which should solve all those kinds of problems. That only leaves the missing cassette interface which is easy to work around (just use a terminal emulator on the serial port and record/replay the output). Unfortunately, Vince has been AWOL for a while now; people in the forums are asking what happened to their orders and are getting no reply. The last I heard of him was around April 2015 when I bought a Superboard III (OSI Challenger / UK101 replica) from him. Too bad, because I built several of his kits and it was a lot of fun.
Anyway, the MicroKim is based on Ruud Baltissen's
"Make your own Kim-1" page, and the schematics for the MicroKim are still online. The 6532 may be somewhat hard to find (but easier than the 6530's), but you can always get two Atari VCS 2600 from eBay: each of them has one in there.
===Jac
PS: Oh, and for a Microchess version that runs on the MicroKim, check out
this page. I didn't test it though.