Looking for MOS 6502
Looking for MOS 6502
I am looking for a 1970's MOS 6502 for a project. Any ideas where I can look?
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lorddoomicus
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Re: Looking for MOS 6502
qubitz wrote:
I am looking for a 1970's MOS 6502 for a project. Any ideas where I can look?
- GARTHWILSON
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- BigDumbDinosaur
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qubitz wrote:
Thanks for the help guys. I'm looking specifically for a 1970s MOS brcuase I am building an Apple 1 replica, and am trying to find parts that were used on the original.
If you have any other thoughts or leads, I'd love to hear.
If you have any other thoughts or leads, I'd love to hear.
x86? We ain't got no x86. We don't NEED no stinking x86!
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The very first 6502's lacked a very important instruction; I don't remember exactly, but maybe the LSR or ROR or both. Replacing the processor with one that has the instruction can't hurt anything though.
Especially if you have an Apple I board, either replica or original, I'd use one of the 1 or 2MHz NMOS 6502's. I don't know if the 14MHz+ current-production ones with the fast rise times would work on that kind of big board.
Especially if you have an Apple I board, either replica or original, I'd use one of the 1 or 2MHz NMOS 6502's. I don't know if the 14MHz+ current-production ones with the fast rise times would work on that kind of big board.
GARTHWILSON wrote:
The very first 6502's lacked a very important instruction; I don't remember exactly, but maybe the LSR or ROR or both. Replacing the processor with one that has the instruction can't hurt anything though.
The CPUs manufactured by MOS after acquisition by Commodore fixed this bug independently of WDC.
GARTHWILSON wrote:
Especially if you have an Apple I board, either replica or original, I'd use one of the 1 or 2MHz NMOS 6502's. I don't know if the 14MHz+ current-production ones with the fast rise times would work on that kind of big board.
- BigDumbDinosaur
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Quote:
If you can ensure fast rise and fall times for the CPU clock, you should be able to. In my Kestrel-1 experience, every pin on the 65816 was tolerant of absolute garbage without malfunction except for the CPU clock input.
x86? We ain't got no x86. We don't NEED no stinking x86!
The 65C02 is usually more tolerant of a poor quality clock than the 65C816. The 65C02 includes a schmitt trigger on the clock input and the clock usually only drives the CPU, which then generates the phase-2 clock for the rest of the system. I had no problems putting a modern 14MHz part in a BBC micro board. If you do put a new WDC part in an old board remember to bend up pin 1 on the 65C02 - this pin is an output on a WDC 65C02 but ground on everybody elses parts!
Shift to the left,
Shift to the right,
Mask in, Mask Out,
BYTE! BYTE! BYTE!
Shift to the right,
Mask in, Mask Out,
BYTE! BYTE! BYTE!
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