Difference between revisions of "JAIR CPU Board"

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[[File:JAIR CPU Board.png|500px]]
 
[[File:JAIR CPU Board.png|500px]]
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==Resources==
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''Under construction''
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{{Blockquote|8-inch Systems
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These were the first floppy drives available in the mid 70s. They were initially designed by IBM as a method to load microcode into their large DASD disk controllers. Other manufacturers started to manufacture them as storage devices for the then beginning small computer market. Many 8080/8085/Z80 CPM-80 systems used these drives. These drives were large, heavy, and required +5V, -5V and 24V to operate. The media spun continuously although the heads were unloaded when not reading or writing. This introduced the head load and unload time to the FDCs. These drives were available in soft- and hard-sectored models. Media was not interchangeable between them soft- and hard-sectored models.
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The first standard disk was the IBM 3740 format 8-inch SSSD disk 241Kb (77 tracks, one head, 26 each 128 byte sectors per track with a skew of six) disk. This was the disk format used for exchange between all the CPM-80 8-inch systems and software providers. http://www.nj7p.org/Computers/Disk%20Subsystems/floppies.html}}
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[[Category:PostEra]]
 
[[Category:PostEra]]
 
[[Category:Operational]]
 
[[Category:Operational]]
 
[[Category:S-100 Boards]]
 
[[Category:S-100 Boards]]
 
[[Category:CP/M]]
 
[[Category:CP/M]]

Revision as of 15:45, 8 June 2016

Joint Altair Imsai Replacement CPU board

Learn about the JAIR CPU replacement board at John Monahan S100Computers.Com site.


This is an Altair and Imsai compatible CPU replacement board designed by Josh Bensadon. I purchased it from him assembled off eBay. Generally this board is only available bare with the user responsible for sourcing parts and construction. It can operate without any cards in an Altair or Imsai equipped with a front panel. I find it very useful in diagnosing other cards while rebuilding S-100 era computers.

JAIR CPU Board.png

Resources

Under construction


8-inch Systems

These were the first floppy drives available in the mid 70s. They were initially designed by IBM as a method to load microcode into their large DASD disk controllers. Other manufacturers started to manufacture them as storage devices for the then beginning small computer market. Many 8080/8085/Z80 CPM-80 systems used these drives. These drives were large, heavy, and required +5V, -5V and 24V to operate. The media spun continuously although the heads were unloaded when not reading or writing. This introduced the head load and unload time to the FDCs. These drives were available in soft- and hard-sectored models. Media was not interchangeable between them soft- and hard-sectored models.

The first standard disk was the IBM 3740 format 8-inch SSSD disk 241Kb (77 tracks, one head, 26 each 128 byte sectors per track with a skew of six) disk. This was the disk format used for exchange between all the CPM-80 8-inch systems and software providers. http://www.nj7p.org/Computers/Disk%20Subsystems/floppies.html