Season's greetings etc.
A quick introduction is in order before I pester everyone I think.
I bought my Einstein from B&H back in the 80's (when I lived nearby sometime around 1986 IIRC) and took it to Uni with me (along with my Dragon 32) to study Computer Science. The Einstein sadly died in my 3rd year after spending far too many nights on it working on coursework, (the Dragon was used to program the lab's D5/D9 6809 kits; it survives to this day) and was replaced by an Amstrad PC1512 (the Einstein PSU was used to power an external add-on drive for the PC1512),
I currently have a TC-01 and monitor in fairly good nick and another in worse shape that I am going to do *something* with at some point. When I say working I mean the keyboard was knackered (one key had 'snapped' and someone had tried superglue with the obvious results and several others were non-responsive).
After a strip down, a good clean and sourcing a replacement keyboard on ebay for spares, I dismantled the keyboard, got all the keys working and Bob's your father's disowned brother that we don't talk about.
Next steps:
Internal Gotek and an external 3.5" (why not)
Joysticks
Burn a diagnostic EPROM
Take a proper look at the broken one - I suspect there is a chip issue as the refurbed working keyboard threw up errors on the suspect unit.
Figure out how to get the D5 kit working again
Cheers for now!
printf("Hello, Einstein World!\n");
printf("Hello, Einstein World!\n");
--
Currently refurbishing a TC-01 (dual 3", monitor) with broken TC-01 as a donor
Original Dragon 32 still working
D5 kit waiting in the wings
Fixing the keyboard was a pain in the a***!
Currently refurbishing a TC-01 (dual 3", monitor) with broken TC-01 as a donor
Original Dragon 32 still working
D5 kit waiting in the wings
Fixing the keyboard was a pain in the a***!
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- Joined: Wed Oct 23, 2019 8:43 pm
Re: printf("Hello, Einstein World!\n");
Welcome! I enjoyed the read!
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- Joined: Thu Oct 24, 2019 11:47 am