Sinclair ZX80

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Sinclair ZX80
Sinclair ZX80
Type Home computer
Released 1980
Discontinued 1981
Processor Z80 @ 3.25 MHz (most machines used the NEC μPD780C-1 equivalent)
Memory 1 KB (16 KB max.)
Operating system Sinclair BASIC

The Sinclair ZX80 was a home computer brought to market in 1980 by Sinclair Research of Cambridge, England. It was notable for being the first computer available in the United Kingdom for under a hundred pounds (a price tag of £99.95, to be exact). It was available in kit form, where purchasers had to assemble and solder it together, and as a ready-built version at a slightly higher cost for those without the skill or inclination to build their own unit. The ZX80 was very popular straight away, and for some time there was a waiting list of several months for either version of the machine.

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[edit] Description

The machine was designed by Jim Westwood around a Z80 central processing unit with a clock speed of 3.25 MHz[1], and was equipped with 1 KB of static RAM and 4 KB of read-only memory containing the Sinclair BASIC programming language, editor, and operating system. BASIC commands were not entered by typing them out but were instead selected somewhat similarly to on a scientific calculator - each key had a few different functions selected by both context and modes as well as with the shift key.

Display was over an RF connection to a household television, and simple offline program storage was possible using a cassette recorder. The video display generator of the ZX80 used minimal hardware plus a combination of software to generate a video signal. As a result of this approach the ZX80 could only generate a picture when it was idle, i.e. waiting for a key to be pressed. When running a BASIC program, or even when pressing as key for any input, the display would, therefore, black out momentarily to support the function. This made moving graphics difficult since the program had to introduce a pause for input to display the next change in graphical output. The later ZX81 improved on this somewhat because it could run in a 'slow' mode while creating a video signal, or in a 'fast' mode without generating a video signal (typically used for lengthy calculations).

A ZX81 8 KB ROM was available to upgrade the ZX80 and cost around 20% of a full blown ZX81. It came with a thin overlay keyboard and ZX81 manual. Simply taking off the top cover of the ZX80 and prying the old ROM from its socket and carefully inserting the new ROM and adding the keyboard overlay, the ZX80 would now function almost identically to the proper ZX81 except for SLOW mode, and this was purely down to hardware differences. The process was easily reversed to get the ZX80 back to its old self.

Sinclair also produced RAM expansion packs for the ZX80; the original ZX80 RAM Pack held either 1, 2 or 3 KB of static RAM, a later model held 16 KB, using dynamic RAM chips (DRAM). There was no upgrade for the monochrome display however.

The machine was mounted in a tiny white plastic case, with a one-piece blue membrane keyboard on the front; it owed its distinctive appearance to industrial designer Rick Dickinson. There were problems with durability, reliability and over-heating. The entire system was about the size of two paperback books placed beside each other. Crude it might have been, but the ZX80 was a true innovator and it kick-started the 1980s home computer craze in the UK and New Zealand. It was superseded by a number of other Sinclair machines, notably the Sinclair ZX81 and the very successful ZX Spectrum.

Sales of the ZX80 reached about 50,000 — an unheard of number for the day which contributed significantly to the UK leading the world in home computer ownership through the 1980s. Owing to the unsophisticated design and the tendency for the units to overheat, surviving machines in good condition are quite uncommon and can fetch high prices by collectors.

[edit] Internal workings

The ZX80 was designed around readily available TTL chips; the only proprietary technology was the firmware. While the successor ZX81 used a semi-custom chip (an ULA or Uncommitted Logic Array), this merely combined the functions of the earlier hardware onto a single chip — the hardware and system programs (except the BASIC versions) were very similar, with the only significant difference being the NMI-generator necessary for slow mode in the ZX81. (See ZX81 for technical details.) Both computers can be made by hobbyists using commercially available discrete logic chips or FPGAs.

[edit] Different flavors

There were also Americanized versions of the ZX80/ZX81 (Micro Ace / Timex Sinclair 1000 or TS1000 respectively). A list can be found at Herr Liebert's ZX80/ZX81 User's Group web site (in Deutsch or English).

[edit] External links

[edit] footnotes

  1. ^ This frequency was critical, as the TV picture generation depended on it (see ZX81).
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