Thanks for the extra details, Tony.
I had one briefly but didn't really want to get into it. It might even have
been the source of yours, I forget what I did with it  :).


On Thu, Dec 4, 2025 at 11:02 AM Tony Duell <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Thu, Dec 4, 2025 at 10:18 AM Adrian Godwin via cctalk
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > There was an add-on for the BBC Micro using the 32016. Like other such
> > add-ons, the BBC acted as a terminal / mass storage etc. while the add-on
> > did the computing. There was at least an 8086 too.
> >
> > It was packaged in a large brown cubical box called the ACW or Acorn
> > Cambridge Workstation. No traditional BBC Micro keyboard wedge in
> evidence,
> > just a dumb keyboard.
> >
> >
> https://www.computinghistory.org.uk/det/33101/Acorn-Cambridge-Workstation/
> >
>
> There was also an 32016 second processor for a normal BBC micro,
> sometime badged 'Cambridge Coprocessor'. It came in the normal
> 'cheesewedge' case and IIRC had 1MByte of memory
>
> The ACW was based on a BBC B+ mainboard. It was fitted in a case with
> a Microvitec colour monitor chassis, PSU, 80-cylinder floppy drive,
> SCSI (or was it strictly SASI) interface which was connected to an
> ST412 interface board and thence to a hard drive. The 32016 board was
> plugged into the Tube connector on the B+ board, but was much larger
> than the one in the 'cheesewedge' case and could take up to 4MBytes of
> RAM.
>
> FWIW I have an example of each.
>
> I also have a Whitechapel MG1 which is 32016-based.
>
> I don't recall an 8086 second processor for the BBC micro in the
> Cheesewedge case (there was an internal 80186 second processor board
> for the BBC Master). I only remember 4 such second processors --
> 65C02, Z80, 32016 and ARM 1. Yes, I have all 4.
>
> -tony
>

Reply via email to