Z80 Mem­ber­ship Card

(sunrise-ev.com)

39 points | by exvi 3 days ago ago

7 comments

  • acutesoftware 2 hours ago ago

    Nice to see old tech revitalised - I had fun with the Australian version of a Z80 single board computer - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TEC-1

  • b800h 3 hours ago ago

    It's a shame Zilog stopped making Z80s. Presumably this means you can't make one of these from new components any more. Perhaps someone could create a new iteration of the same idea.

    • lpribis 2 hours ago ago

      The Z80 instruction set lives on via the eZ80, Z180 and others which are binary compatible with the original Z80 instruction set. Unfortunately Zilog stopped making the 40 pin DIP package a couple years ago so yeah this specific board will be hard to source. You can still find them on gray market, mostly ones that have been desoldered from existing boards.

      Even if you made a version of this board with the footprint changed to the QFP eZ80, it probably wouldn't work because the eZ80 has different memory mapping and clocking differences.

      • 0xTJ an hour ago ago

        The Z180 has however had its PLCC packages discontinued. Personally, I find SMD CPUs to not be appealing for these sorts of projects, even if the Z180 is a great chip.

    • shakna an hour ago ago

      You can probably put together something similar with A-Z80 [0] or a similar FPGA redesign.

      [0] https://github.com/gdevic/A-Z80

  • unwind an hour ago ago

    I think this is very cool, even though I have no historical connection to the Z80 it's of course a well-regarded and firmly entrenched/popular retro CPU.

    But this really is a stretch:

    The Z80 Membership Card itself is a stand-alone single-board computer that can "power up" your projects, like the Parallax BASIC Stamps or Arduino microcomputers.

    Both of those are very commonly called microcontrollers, not microcomputers, since they have all of those extra chips merged into the single package of the CPU.

    Take a look at the Arduino Uno [1] which is a very typical (if old) example: you will see that the board is not covered in ICs from edge to edge, since all of the main functionality is in the single-chip microcontroller. I think the second big-ish package visible is for the USB, but that also disappears on more modern controllers with on-board support for USB.

    [1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arduino_Uno#/media/File:Arduin...

  • Barathkanna an hour ago ago

    This is pretty eye-opening. It really drives home how simple the core control logic can be. Starting with toy cars or small-scale vehicles feels like a great way to teach and validate these ideas before layering on unnecessary complexity.