Greetings Programs,
You may have noticed (or not!) that I've been less active here than usual for the past few months. That's because Victoria got a new job and we moved to Texas!
Our new house has an outbuilding in the back yard, which our landlady has given me permission to finish and turn into a workshop. This is a fairly pricey project, however, since the outbuilding is totally unfinished and not climate controlled, so I'm saving that for the fall. In the meantime, I've converted a corner of the garage into a makeshift workshop and partially unpacked my tools and supplies.
Attachment:
1000001805.jpg [ 2.71 MiB | Viewed 1521 times ]
This week I'm home sick for my birthday (
) and I felt like working on a project. Maybe surprisingly, I've never actually built a whole breadboard computer, so I decided to do that. I started out with baby steps. Good news! My DMM still works; my scope still works; I still remember how to cut jumper wires!
I whipped up a partial schematic:
Attachment:
BlueBoard.pdf [81 KiB]
Downloaded 44 times
Not much new in here; it's mostly using simpler versions of ideas from Blue August. It will have a VIA in case I want some output ports, etc., but I'm mostly planning on connecting to it with a serial terminal over an ACIA. I laid the parts out on my breadboard:
Attachment:
PXL_20240418_154318892.jpg [ 2.68 MiB | Viewed 1521 times ]
But there's a twist! I will be using the "wire wrap on breadboards" construction method! Why? No particular reason, except it seems like a neat idea. A retro-computer enthusiast on another forum used this method to give a little more permanence to a very elaborate breadboard system he built. I wired up the power LED and clock generator today (I said baby steps, right?):
Attachment:
1000001804.jpg [ 2.35 MiB | Viewed 1521 times ]
So far so good! Getting a nice clean 4MHz signal out of my 74HC74 flip-flop.