Difference between revisions of "Imsai 8080"
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− | This was my dad's computer. I recently [http://www.theretrowagon.com/imsai-power-supply-rebuild/ rebuilt the power supply] of dads original, I bought another off ebay | + | This was my dad's computer. I recently [http://www.theretrowagon.com/imsai-power-supply-rebuild/ rebuilt the power supply] of dads original, I bought another Imsai computer off ebay to house the Wameco hexadecimal display front panel. I sent both of these front panels out to System Glitch for repair. I did the mechanical reinforcement of the switches on the Wameco FP1. |
[[File:Imsai 8080 Advertisment power.JPG|thumb|Archive.Org Byte Magazine Volume 02 Number 07 - Model Railroads]] | [[File:Imsai 8080 Advertisment power.JPG|thumb|Archive.Org Byte Magazine Volume 02 Number 07 - Model Railroads]] |
Revision as of 15:41, 18 January 2018
Imsai 8080 S-100 computer. The original on top, and retrofitted with a hexadecimal front panel from Wameco on the bottom
This was my dad's computer. I recently rebuilt the power supply of dads original, I bought another Imsai computer off ebay to house the Wameco hexadecimal display front panel. I sent both of these front panels out to System Glitch for repair. I did the mechanical reinforcement of the switches on the Wameco FP1.
Images
Pictured with original 8080 CPU card, an unknow manufacturer 8k RAM board and Martin Eberhard's post era 88-2SIOJP I/O and EPROM board.
Resources
IMSAI 8080 at Wikipedia.