Where can I find schematics?

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Terrel Shumway
Posts: 14
Joined: Tue Feb 16, 2021 12:12 am

Where can I find schematics?

Post by Terrel Shumway »


I want to design an expansion card, but I haven't found any schematics or other info I would need for the interface.

I understand that this may not be stable right now, but I would at least like an idea of what it might eventually look like. I see four slots on the prototype motherboard. There must be a pinout somewhere.

Lorin Millsap
Posts: 193
Joined: Wed Apr 29, 2020 6:46 pm

Where can I find schematics?

Post by Lorin Millsap »

We are not releasing schematics until after product release.


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Terrel Shumway
Posts: 14
Joined: Tue Feb 16, 2021 12:12 am

Where can I find schematics?

Post by Terrel Shumway »


Can you release the pinout for the expansion cards, or at least a high-level description of what you expect expansion cards to look like? Is it just a direct access to the 40 6502 pins or something else?

 

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Cyber
Posts: 482
Joined: Mon Apr 27, 2020 7:36 am

Where can I find schematics?

Post by Cyber »


In the post below @Kevin Williams posted expansion bus pin out, but keep in mind this may be not a final pinout!


 

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Cyber
Posts: 482
Joined: Mon Apr 27, 2020 7:36 am

Where can I find schematics?

Post by Cyber »


There were a little bit more comments on the subject in X16 FB group:

https://www.facebook.com/groups/CommanderX16/permalink/708501963234234

TomXP411
Posts: 1783
Joined: Tue May 19, 2020 8:49 pm

Where can I find schematics?

Post by TomXP411 »


There are no firm pinouts for the expansion bus yet, for obvious reasons.

If you really want to design an expansion card, I'd suggest starting by getting one of the WDC developer boards, such as the W65C02SXB. That has a full expansion bus, and you can breadboard and prototype an expansion card using that for your prototype. Once the CX16 is actually available, it should be a simple matter to move your prototype over to the Commander proto board and test it on the real machine. 

 

neutrino
Posts: 182
Joined: Wed Oct 19, 2022 5:26 pm

Where can I find schematics?

Post by neutrino »


Any update?

https://yewtu.be/watch?v=AcWqMGju7fk - The Commander X16 has finally arrived! 2022-10-11

 

TomXP411
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Joined: Tue May 19, 2020 8:49 pm

Where can I find schematics?

Post by TomXP411 »



On 10/19/2022 at 3:56 PM, neutrino said:




Any update?



https://yewtu.be/watch?v=AcWqMGju7fk - The Commander X16 has finally arrived! 2022-10-11



 



Nothing has changed, notably: 


Quote




We are not releasing schematics until after product release.



 

Haslor
Posts: 2
Joined: Thu Dec 22, 2022 3:36 pm

Where can I find schematics?

Post by Haslor »



On 2/15/2021 at 9:02 PM, Cyber said:




In the post below @Kevin Williams posted expansion bus pin out, but keep in mind this may be not a final pinout!




 



Hello All;

 

Okay, I know you are into all things Commodore and you are basing the Commander 16 loosely on it, but I think you are missing a few points, which would make your board more usable.

 

I looked at your I/O card bus and it looks to be 90% of the Apple][ I/O bus, so why didn't you just follow the Apple][ I/OBus? (Attached)

Doing so would have given you a host of existing Apple ][ I/O cards which could work with the Commander 16. (You might even get the Apple DISK ][ drives working.) 

You could use the User 1 Pin (Pin 39) to control the system clock, while accessing slower I/O devices.

This would also give you access to a host of coprocessor cards like the Microsoft's CPM Z80 card, and several 6809 and 68008 cards.

 

Curious why you placed the I/O in the middle of Memory. You could have placed it at the top of memory over the ROM or RAM. Seeing there are only 16 Memory location at the top of memory ($FFF0-$FFFF) which are Reserved for system use.

Placing the I/O at the top of memory — Minus the last 16 bytes — would give you the rest RAM as open space.

Also if you replace the 6502 with the 65816 in the future, putting the I/O at the top means, your banks of memory are uninterrupted. Which might be important is the greater vision.

The 816 reminds me of the 8088 / 8086 where memory wasn’t contiguous you could use it in 64K banks, even though you had 256K.

 

You could have your instant on Basic by sharing the ROM space with RAM, like theApple Language Card. And like the language card, you could copy the PROM in to RAM on reset, using a small utility; or the language could be loaded from the SD card. (BTW, Having two SD cards would be Cool, or even figuring out a way to connect a small SATA SSD or IP Stack for EitherNet or Wireless.)

This would also give you the ability to bring in other languages on to the system, such as Pascal, C, Compiled Basic, and the like, without having the space broken up by the IO map.

Also PROM's are hard to revise, unless your user base has PROM Burners, SD Languages would be way better. (Cause you need the VGA Card and it comes with the SD Card reader.)

 

Also you claimed the data/address decoding was too difficult to enact, but your method of banking is taking more chips and several memory locations, with is effectively doing the same thing the 816 is doing internally. WDC has a two chip Solution, which is in the 65816 data sheet (page 44).

You would also gain a 16bit register and a host of additional opcodes.

 

You might also look into some of the 6502 utilities WOZ and others crated for 6502 systems and theApple I & ][.  

The Sweet 16 would assist with 16 bit math.

WOS also wrote something to expand the number of registers for the 6502, and I believe that some or all of them were 16bit registers.

Apple had the Programmer's Aid 1 which was a bunch of useful routines.

There are Floating Point Routines for the 6502.

There is also a CP/M like OS out there for the 6502.

Basically I would look at old Dr. Dobbs issues for ideas, of utilities long forgotten, but still useful.

 

One could expand the 16bit RAM register idea, to 24 bit RAM registers for the 65816. (They had a perfect opportunity to expand the Registers when they created the 816 but they didn’t.)

 

Well those are my suggestions. 

Haslor

 
Apple][bus connector.png
spargue
Posts: 29
Joined: Thu Apr 13, 2023 8:56 pm

Re: Where can I find schematics?

Post by spargue »

There are a number of design decisions that are questionable, even with the new 60-pin slots having a couple of weird extras in there. Seems the design team doesn't want to know or care about how hurting the enthusiasts. Obvious bottlenecks or non-breaking fixes are just ignored or dumped on.
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