Hi

 

Normally a batch of 30 new PCBs costs around $550 to $600 US.  There is a small 
margin if everything works perfectly.  It never does though so the margin fills 
in the gaps like broken and missing boards, unexpected expenses, packing tape, 
mailers, and the like.

 

Thanks and have a nice day!

Andrew Lynch

 

 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of David Fry
Sent: Thursday, February 6, 2014 2:58 AM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: [N8VEM-S100:2328] Re: accepting pre-orders for the S-100 Z80 CPU V2 
board

 

Hi Andrew,

 

Adopt a board, Mmm that could work too..

 

Could you give us some idea of what the costs would be up front to order and 
sit on a batch of 10, 20 or 50  boards etc..

 

I'm guessing that people may adopt boards thay actually need so I may be 
interested in adopting the ZFDC or the MSDOS support board, just need to know 
the costs before committing as I dont have a regular job.

 

regards

 

David Fry

 

regards
On Sunday, January 5, 2014 8:39:03 PM UTC, lynchaj wrote:

Hi!

 

We are about to do another run of our popular S-100 Bus Z80 CPU V2 board.  This 
board can run in systems (with bus termination etc.) at up to 10MHz.  Apart 
from all the then common features found on many older S100 Z80 boards (and 
being completely S-100 IEEE-696 compliant), it had an extremely clever and 
powerful ability to allow the Z80 to address up to 1 MG of RAM in 16K "windows" 
within the Z80's address space.  This is described here:-

 

http://www.s100computers.com/My%20System%20Pages/Z80%20Board/Z80%20CPU%20Board.htm

 

Its primary importance is that it can be used to address greater than 64K of 
RAM for CPM3 and that it can be used to load/examine 8086 code at the top of 
the 1MG address space.

 

The new “V2” version of the board now has the ability to (under software 
control) dynamically switch between two 4K blocks of code in its onboard  28C64 
EEPROM (or EPROM) yet still only occupy 4K in the Z80’s 64K memory space.  This 
in effect almost doubles the size of a possible Z80 monitor.  The extra code 
(currently being written) will include things like directly downloading binary 
files from a PC into the Z80’s 64K (or 8086’s 1M) address space.

 

In addition, the S-100 Z80 CPU V2 has the ability to use an external CPU clock 
from an external source (S-100 bus pin 66 aka NDEF3).  This is essential for 
CPU to video synchronization for MSX compatibility particularly in games.  
There will be a corresponding ability to export a CPU clock signal on the next 
version of the S-100 VDP board although this could come from any S-100 board.

 

Current owners of the V1 board can just switch the IC’s to this new bare board. 

 

The S-100 Z80 CPU V2 PCBs will be $20 each as per the usual arrangement.  
Shipping in the US is $3 for a single PCB and $2 for each additional PCB.  
Shipping internationally is $12.75 for a single PCB and $3 for each additional 
PCB.  This is for the bare basics USPS first class postage with no tracking or 
insurance.  The builder assumes all risk of delivery as per usual arrangement.

 

My preference is to sell these PCBs to vintage computer/home brew 
computer/classic computer hobbyists first but if there are any remaining boards 
I will put them on eBay.

 

Please send a PayPal to [email protected] <javascript:>  with the subject “S-100 
Z80 CPU V2 board” and I will reserve your board(s).  I need about 20 pre-orders 
to warrant a manufacturing run.  I will post more information as it becomes 
available.

 

Thanks and have a nice day!

 

Andrew Lynch

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