Very nice find groinksan! And welcome.
It would be nice if you could dump the ROM - that will spill all the secrets of what this trainer is capable of.
It's just possible you can get something from the manufacturer, who seems to be Festo or Festo Didactic, who have a North American presence but might actually be from Germany. See
http://www.festo-didactic.com/ov3/media ... tems_1.pdf and also
http://www.festo-didactic.com/de-de but I think you'd need to find a nice helpful person with access to materials from obsolete product lines.
It seems that the board was used educationally in Turkey... and in fact as you may know it seems to be allied to the
Visual 6502 project of Nurettin Topaloğlu whose site features a photo of this board:
http://w3.gazi.edu.tr/~nurettin/visual_en.htmlbut, alas, with no further detail. (His Visual 6502 is a GUI simulator for Windows, not to be confused with the in-browser transistor-level simulator at visual6502.org)
Elsewhere, someone notes
Quote:
The native language of the software appears to be Turkish, but I found a language setting in an ini file (reversed the order of Turkish/English) and that switched it to English mode. I haven't messed with it too much but it does look pretty cool, and the reason I wanted it was because it has some "virtual" switches and LEDs to play with and supposedly interfaces with my trainer somehow
There's a book "Microprocessor Troubleshooting: Concepts and Applications" published by Buck Engineering Company which might cover this Lab Volt board. Or even better, one called "MICROPROCESSOR - CONCEPTS AND APPLICATIONS" by Buck Engineering
which features this board on the cover.
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B002K7TK8Y/