[Coco] Multipak redesign/replacement
Andrew
keeper63 at cox.net
Sun Feb 22 13:46:00 EST 2015
Gene,
When I was originally thinking about the idea I proposed regarding a
"backplane" - I wasn't thinking of it having a case, and it being only a
kit. For a low run (50 units) - something like that I think could be
done for the prices you suggested ($60 kit, $120 assembled - and the end
user would need to supply a case). I seem to recall something like this
being sold in Rainbow (basically an open-frame MPI, with a cable to the
CoCo side)...
Hmm - I guess my memory was faulty on the details - but it was called
the "A-BUS" by ALPHA Products (242-W West Avenue, Darien, CT 06820) -
from the advertisement on page 21 of the December 1987 Rainbow (and I am
pretty sure they were advertising before this issue and somewhat afterward).
Each "motherboard" could hold 5 cards, up to five adaptors could be
connected; they seem to have had their own line of cards for various
purposes (all look like they were for industrial/robotics control
purposes). Various adaptors (to connect to the motherboards) were
available for a variety of different systems, of which the CoCo was one.
They also mention that the adaptor could work in an MPI - so in theory
with a CoCo (if I am reading right) - 100 slots were potentially
possible (power req's aside)...
Anyhow - take a look at that ad if you care; that was what I was
imagining, except with the cards (and "motherboard") turned 90 degrees
so that they were all the same "height".
I'm ignorant about the design of the MPI, and I have not seen the
schematic; I know it is more than just some buffered I/O data/address
lines from the port ganged together (for one, there's the switch up
front, plus it needed it's own power supply) - but I have to admit that
I didn't think it was much more complex (maybe a few extra chips for
address selection - plus other passives for filtering and such).
I do agree that the initial system for design and debug purposes should
be kept as simple as possible, to learn from and see what works, etc. I
also wonder if maybe (with the right design - again, being ignorant of
the design and schematic of the MPI, this may be impossible) the number
of slots could be configurable; that is, start with 2 or 3 slots, and
then if you need more, extra slots could be added. That way, the final
kit could be customizable to the needs of the end-user, and in the
future (providing the design files were kept available to the
community), if more slots were needed and you or whomever couldn't make
them, they might not be to difficult to DIY. It might also lower the
cost of the project (?).
Finally - and again being ignorant of the schematic and PCB for an MPI -
does milling make the most sense (to you)? From what I gather, it seems
you have the equipment and skill to do it - so that's a "sunk cost" -
but would other methods make the turn-around faster for revisions (toner
transfer, UV transfer, or even sending off to an el-cheapo chinese
boardhouse)?
Maybe not for the very first one (which may be all you are after
initially) - but for revisions afterward...? I'm not questioning your
skills or experience here; I'm just trying to gain some understanding
myself about the process, as I said that I don't have any experience in
design and development of a PCB. It also may be the size of the PCB
involved (which I wonder if a smaller but modular design like I
suggested above might not help in the initial design and debug stage as
well).
Well - that's enough for now...oh, and I would definitely be willing to
buy one of these, even if it came to more than $120.00 for a kit. Also,
I have a few different cartridges that could be tried out (not just rom
paks - though I have plenty of those - but also others; RS-232, floppy,
speech-sound, Orchestra-90, even a DS-68B video digitizer somewhere).
--
Andrew L. Ayers
Glendale, Arizona
http://www.phoenixgarage.org/
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