Wooden Case Sinclair ZX81| 8BitBites

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  • Опубликовано: 17 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 178

  • @peddersoldchap
    @peddersoldchap Год назад +1

    The way you said composite when you were a child, is the correct one.

  • @whiskeytuesday
    @whiskeytuesday 2 года назад +2

    I was not expecting the whole 81 to be in there, plastic case and all intact.

  • @samuel_towle
    @samuel_towle 2 года назад +13

    Brings back memories of my uncle who visited our house one day in '82 carrying a Timex Sinclair ZX-81, A Signetics TTL data sheet book, and a box of about 300 of the 7400 series TTL chips that were being thrown out by the company where he worked. I Wrote my first computer program on that computer. Although my uncle is no longer with us, I still have the ZX-81 that he gave to me. RIP uncle Rod.

  • @williamharris8367
    @williamharris8367 4 года назад +22

    I love the wooden case! Whoever made this had some decent skills.

  • @alexanderdesmouceaux4395
    @alexanderdesmouceaux4395 4 года назад +33

    This just beautiful, LGR woulg get crazy with all this wood!

    • @Dreams_Of_Lavender
      @Dreams_Of_Lavender 2 года назад +7

      I can hear him giggling to himself in my head, lol

  • @valley_robot
    @valley_robot 2 года назад +15

    The zx81 was my first computer, I’m from the UK and this machine was integral to making computers cheap enough for the average person to own , in the uk we had a thriving industry making games for this and the successful zx spectrum , a lot of the developers of those games are still making games to this day , we had proper keyboards for this machine it was a 40.00 uk upgrade , we loved this machine and we made it good

    • @MechanicaMenace
      @MechanicaMenace 2 года назад

      I had a Beeb myself. The Speccy was indeed a gaming powerhouse but... I'm happy I never had to code one one.

  • @figureheaduk
    @figureheaduk 4 года назад +27

    As a Brit, it's always nice to hear an American refer to the old Sinclair machines as "Zed Ex" and not "Zee Ex"

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  4 года назад +8

      I'm Canadian but also lived in the States. I say it both ways unfortunately. :)

    • @lubricatedgoat
      @lubricatedgoat 4 года назад +4

      Trying to get my kid to say zed instead of zee is driving me nuts. Online gaming.

    • @rivards1
      @rivards1 4 года назад +12

      My rule is to respect the intent of the manufacturer and marketing - thus the British Sinclair machine is a Zed Ex, but the American CPU is a Zee 80.

    • @disposablebasterd
      @disposablebasterd 3 года назад +1

      Do English people pronounce it Zee bra or Zed ebra ?

    • @valley_robot
      @valley_robot 2 года назад

      Yep , what he said

  • @spodula
    @spodula 4 года назад +28

    The video issue is due to the signal missing out the "back porch" part of signal on earlier versions of the ULA. This means that any composite monitor (and/or color TVs), cant properly determine the black level. Works fine on Black and white TVs, less so on anything else. the 2c210 ULA fixes this. There are also a few other hacks on the internet to fix it.

  • @davidsandy5917
    @davidsandy5917 2 года назад +11

    Just a note about this computer. Back in 1980 I was given the task of balancing the Auxiliary Air Doors on the Harrier Jump Jet. The balance weights fit into the leading edges of the doors. Their mass was a function of the contour relative to a plane parallel to the axis of the door. Their CG was the centroid of that section. I used a Sinclair ZX81 to optimize the design of those balance weights. The program took a tiny fraction of the memory available and saved me hours of hand calculations. Don't sneer at 1980's computers. Their capabilities were only limited by their users. In fact, today, I would like a computer that is as easy to program as the Sinclair.

    • @SolarLantern424
      @SolarLantern424 Год назад

      That's an incredible story! Did you work building harriers then? I would have thought bae or whoever it was could have let you use a vax or something? Can't believe the zx81 had a part in the history of the harrier jump jet! Amazing!

  • @LunaManar
    @LunaManar 2 года назад +2

    Of all the available ZX81 games you had to pick the most terrifying one.
    (I approve.)

  • @Bob3519
    @Bob3519 Год назад +1

    Your "Composite" comments brought back a memory.
    I worked at a large computer manufacturer about 1995 doing tech support. The new line of desktop computers had a modem that was also a fax, telephone and answering machine. In Windows device manager there was a component called "telephony" device. It was pronounced 'tel if fen i'. Unfortunately we had a habit of calling it 'Tele phoney' since it was problematic and was a pain to support. When I was talking to the customer and always paused before saying the name of the device to prevent a Freudian slip.

  • @bzert281
    @bzert281 3 года назад +8

    BASIC command completion: the nicest experience i remember, is Benton Harbor BASIC from Heathkit on their H8, you'd type PRINT by typing PR and then the interpreter would autocomplete "INT (space)" -that had such a nice feel.

  • @jasejj
    @jasejj 2 года назад +8

    The machine is British, and we pronounce "composite" the way you do, so in fact for the purposes of this video you were right the first time 😉
    BTW I might be wrong but I thought it was possible to upgrade the '81 to 32K internally...

  • @randywatson8347
    @randywatson8347 2 года назад +4

    Wow 30 buks including a nicely varnished woodcase.
    Man those are the best looking keys ever.

  • @3DSage
    @3DSage 2 года назад +1

    It's exciting to find your channel before you explode to a huge youtuber! Amazing content and I look forward to your future videos too!

  • @rustywidebottom4678
    @rustywidebottom4678 4 года назад +8

    Speaking of David Ahl’s book(s) of BASIC programs, most of those used the ‘:’ colon statement continuation character, which the ZX/81 and TS-1000 BASIC sadly lacked. But this little machine really captured me and I learned all about it through various Z-80 books. Thanks for a great trip down memory lane. Very jealous of your real keyboard and near-mint in box Memopak 16K.

  • @valley_robot
    @valley_robot 2 года назад +3

    I’m a 70s kid and having one of these with a tape recorder and a black and white TV in my bedroom was magical , I programmed so many silly little things on it , I had a database program of all my school friends on it , plus my own personal diary on data tape , it was so cool to own a real computer in the UK

  • @sethbramwell
    @sethbramwell 3 года назад +5

    That is one sweet case. I'd have definitely grabbed it for 30 too. I especially like the supports in the case for the zx81. It was a lot less modded than I expected.

  • @MrPGT
    @MrPGT 2 года назад +7

    Late to the party, but I wanted to say that DK on the keyboard pcb is almost certainly DK'Tronics. They made a lot of the aftermarket Spectrum keyboards and other interfaces for the U.K. market.

  • @crabby7668
    @crabby7668 2 года назад +1

    Nice buy, an interesting case! It is nice to hear someone from North America who understands why the ZX80 and zx81 were the way they were, rather than just hating on them. Affordability pure and simple. If it was a case of poor keyboard and strange video, or absolutely no computer at all, then millions chose to suck it up and buy one. Having missed out on them first time around, but recently viewed a couple of the old sinclair magazines online, I was astounded to see all of the add ons and even business software that could be bought for them. These seemingly insignificant computers kickstarted a whole industry. The zx81 was built by Timex in Scotland and apparently they were imported to USA as zx81s before Timex got the deal to rebrand them. You got there first but I was going to suggest the memotech memory pack. I wonder why other companies didn't choose that plan form as it seems much more stable than the usual memory packs.

  • @thepvporg
    @thepvporg 2 года назад +3

    The mission was price point. Sinclair brought to market the first sub £100 computer, in the time period you refer to, the average wage per week was about $46 (equivalent) per week or (£23), if you had a technical job, you'd earn more than that but not much more. So when you had commodore computers at £500 only those with saving power or very high paid jobs could afford them.

  • @davidsandy5917
    @davidsandy5917 2 года назад +2

    One thing that I really appreciated about the ZX81 was the single key basic command entry. The system was intelligent enough to know when to expect a command and when to expect an argument.

  • @McTroyd
    @McTroyd 4 года назад +16

    It's really easy to sneer at a machine like this in 2020, but one has to admire what Sir Clive Sinclair managed to make commercially viable for < $100 in the early 80s. Anyone that's ever bought a cheap computer owes something to this unit. The Timex variant was the first computer I technically "used" (as a toddler, pretending I was "typing"). Since all your ICs are socketed on that board, why not simply replace the SRAM with 16/32K unit? It would have been criminally expensive in 1982, but can be had for a couple bucks on eBay these days.

    • @AiOinc1
      @AiOinc1 2 года назад +3

      Not all of the Timex units had socketed chips, neither of mine do.
      Then, as with now, "Cheap" does not mean "Good" nor "Useful." In 1982, Commodore was running a trade in campaign promising $100 trade in on any competitor's computer towards a C64 - Almost 60% of the Sinclair's sales in the US during that time were thanks only to Commodore paying double what the machine cost new in trade in.
      The real hero of the cheap computer story has always been Commodore - The C64 was priced down to

    • @SolarLantern424
      @SolarLantern424 Год назад

      @@AiOinc1 Sounds like a great deal! The zx81 was their first computer that let them do things and then it even let them have a commodore 64 too!

  • @mUbase
    @mUbase 2 года назад +2

    Ah, I LOVED my ZX81. I originally had the 1K version with 16K RAM pack and then a friend gave me his ZX81 in a DK'Tronics external keyboard case with the 16K RAM built in (no more wobble). I also was given a case of cassettes with games and utilities. It was a joy to use. :) x

  • @JCMayPE
    @JCMayPE 3 года назад +4

    I still have my ZX-81... Bought it new with the help of my grandparents in 1982. Whoever it was that assembled it signed the voltage regulator heat sink... On Christmas day, 1981.

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  3 года назад +2

      I always love finding stuff like that. Makes the people working the assembly line less anonymous.

    • @TheErador
      @TheErador 2 года назад

      You sure it was new? Probably not built on an assembly line if it was Christmas Day! Sounds like that was a kit built one.

  • @andysimpson8974
    @andysimpson8974 Год назад

    I love the little sketches you do.

  • @dannyarnold9823
    @dannyarnold9823 3 года назад +7

    The keyboard was made by DK Tronics UK. They sold aftermarket keyboard kits for the zx81, I myself built one for my computer when I was a 12 year old enthusiast.

    • @patrickcardon1643
      @patrickcardon1643 2 года назад

      Yes, usually came with a black plastic box, got one for mine. Can't remember they sold the keyboard bare though, always seen it as a kit with the replacement housing.

  • @eviltriplet
    @eviltriplet 2 года назад +3

    Nice video!
    Re the single key entry - I think most BASICs do tokenisation, i.e. store the commands as single bytes as lines are typed in. Getting the user to do it by using the single key entry meant Sinclair BASIC didn't need to include tokenisation code therefore it fitted in the tiny 8K of ROM. They sold it as a time saving feature but when the Spectrum came out it had so many commands that some of them took more keypresses that actually just typing them.

  • @davidward9935
    @davidward9935 2 года назад +1

    I loved my Timex Sinclair 1000. I rarely used it for games. I bought the tape programs and reverse engineered them to understand hoe code was written and then wrote a lot of code to practice and learn. I enjoyed writing trigonometric calculation programs. I always wanted to use the board edge connector for home monitoring and relay control.

  • @adamgreenhaus4691
    @adamgreenhaus4691 3 года назад +1

    Oooh I love when the algorithm sends me early to a channel that's blowing up.

  • @danrichards9516
    @danrichards9516 2 года назад +1

    I just found your channel last night, and hands down you’re now my #1 non-gaming channel. About time one of you old computer guys with a seriously historic collection started showing that stuff off on YT 👍

  • @ClovisChitwood
    @ClovisChitwood 2 года назад +2

    I can vaguely remember visiting my aunt (an actual rocket scientist) in the early eighties and she proudly showed me her Timex Sinclair running her FORTRAN program analyzing rocket test data, as limited as these early home/hobbyist computers were it's hard to understand now just how revolutionary they were

  • @10p6
    @10p6 Год назад +1

    Interesting ZX81. You should try some of the 16K High Res games, like Manic Minor, Space invaders and so on. Pretty impressive for back in the day on the ZX81.

  • @tolentarpay5464
    @tolentarpay5464 2 года назад +1

    Oh man, that's totally giving me wood...

  • @TechTimeTraveller
    @TechTimeTraveller  4 года назад +13

    I apologize - I went too far on the gross out factor. I never should have mentioned bread loaf endpieces. They're just nasty.

    • @bluerizlagirl
      @bluerizlagirl 2 года назад +1

      The end crusts are the best part of the loaf!

  • @DavidAStephenson
    @DavidAStephenson 4 года назад +3

    Super interesting find, amazing what gets done to these machines. BTW, good to hear Composite being said properly, I'd do the drinking game in reverse :-)

    • @bzert281
      @bzert281 3 года назад +2

      I feel like it's being "Said platform-appropriately." During the "Zee-80" project i noticed it was all kum-PAH-zit. During the "Zed-Ex" project, it's KAHMP-uh-zit. He's just matching the talk to the tech. My Chevy has a trunk. My MG, has a boot.

  • @JVHShack
    @JVHShack Год назад

    LGR would definitely approve of the wooden case.

  • @choppergirl
    @choppergirl Год назад

    Someone was a master cabinet maker.
    Looks like what my dad would make if I had told him I needed a computer case.
    You can probably fit the expansion pack by taking it out of it's plastic cartridge.. or if you don't want to do that.. using a male to female extension ribbon cable.

  • @derekchristenson5711
    @derekchristenson5711 2 года назад

    That is a very nice case there!

  • @PaleozoicPCs
    @PaleozoicPCs 4 года назад +4

    Back in the early 1990's someone passed along to me a box of three ZX-81/TS1000s (I forget what the mix was) that they were given when they mentioned they'd like a computer at home. (In exchange/out of pity I gave them an IBM XT I got at a government surplus sale for about $20.) The only good use I ever found for one was stealing the Z80A CPU out of it to repair a TRS-80.
    (I did manage at least to get one of them to "work", despite all three having completely shot keyboard membranes. Had one memory expansion pack between them that would crash the machine if the connection was stressed *at all*, and this ridiculous cash register printer thing.)

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  4 года назад

      I have a pile of them myself. Bil Herd of Commodore fame said in a video they used to use these machines as doorstops. I just remember being curious about them.. you'd see them at most computer shops tucked away in a corner. That said, I've seen some of the high res stuff they can do with mods and it's pretty impressive. But that keyboard.. uggggh

  • @nicwilson89
    @nicwilson89 2 года назад

    I didn't expect to see the ZX81 inside its original chassis inside the wooden build, interesting

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  2 года назад

      I'm thinking the owner wants to preserve the original case for some reason. Perhaps if his modification didn't work.

    • @nicwilson89
      @nicwilson89 2 года назад

      @@TechTimeTraveller Ahhh, that's actually pretty smart, honestly. If it were me, I'd have lost the original case years ago and by now would probably feel pretty sad about it haha

  • @gregskuza7166
    @gregskuza7166 2 года назад +1

    You can put 16kb on the ZX81 motherboard by replacing the 1kb with 16 and adding additional addressing lines. Very simple procedure and no memory pack needed!!!

  • @jantonkens9820
    @jantonkens9820 2 года назад +1

    Not sure if someone else already said, but old cassette units offered "remote control" that was just a remote pause switch: you could pause or release playback or record. Can imagine he wanted to control tape from keyboard

  • @frankowalker4662
    @frankowalker4662 2 года назад +2

    That is a geogoeus looking case.
    There is a very simple composite mod using a 555 IC and a couple of transistors that gives a perfect picture by adding the back porch to the video signal. (Which the ZX81 is missing.).
    Also you can replace the built in 1K memory chip with a 16K or even a 32K chip. It's a bit tricky, but worth it. :)

  • @____________________________.x
    @____________________________.x 2 года назад +2

    Memopak HRG was the High Resolution Graphics module (192 x 248 pixels)

  • @michaelstoliker971
    @michaelstoliker971 Год назад

    I had an Atari 400 with it's membrane keyboard. I had to put a replacement B-Key keyboard from a third party supplier and a memory expansion to 48K before I was happy to use the computer on a daily basis. It made a huge difference.

  • @georgecrane7346
    @georgecrane7346 4 года назад +7

    $30??? How do you find such good deals? The eBay gods are good to you :)

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  4 года назад +5

      It's all about patience and tons and tons of searching. And some luck. I look at ebay every day and every now and then a deal like this comes up and I leap on it.

  • @tobyCornish
    @tobyCornish 2 года назад +2

    Do you think there was a compelling reason why they kept the board in the original case (inside the wood case)? Apologies if I missed it in the video.

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  2 года назад +1

      I really can't say.. I thought it odd too.. I think the case has some kind of ground metal or such in it..maybe they didn't want to bother with that. Or they just didn't want to toss the case.

    • @absurdengineering
      @absurdengineering 2 года назад

      Whether they knew it or not, it was the right thing to do. It preserved the RF shielding. Technically it was illegal to use without proper shielding, and practically not a kind thing to do if there were other radio spectrum users nearby. Those old PCB layouts and associated cabling were notorious radiators. Imagine putting together a ZX81 clone using surface mount chips and a ULA analogue with discrete logic, using a 4-layer PCB and modern techniques. It wouldn’t need any shielding and remain compliant. Of course back in the 80s such work was the domain of military and professional gear and out of reach of consumers.

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  2 года назад

      @@absurdengineering Yeah that sort of makes sense to me. I wondered if the shielding had something to do with it. You wouldn't just leave the whole thing together like that unless you had a good reason. Many thanks for that insight!

  • @Applecompuser
    @Applecompuser 2 года назад

    My friend's father had one. I did not know it had a UK connection at the time. Several years later, I would own an Atari 800.

  • @AiOinc1
    @AiOinc1 2 года назад

    Holy crap a keyboard you can ACTUALLY type on! Beauty of a wooden case as well, someone worked really hard on that. I guess they were trying to make up the difference to a VIC-20 they could have spent the same amount of money on.
    Hilarious how they mounted it, didn't even take the board out! I bet the "TP" key connected to the phono jack is because some tape decks had the ability to automatically play/pause from a remote source. Maybe he had wired it in like this so he didn't have to reach over? Tape play/Tape pause?
    Lots of people joke about how badly British cars were built, but we always used to joke that most weren't built at all! Simply put, the fall of the British automotive industry in the 1970s and 1980s and the massive economic downturn immediately after falls solely onto the squares of the people who didn't want to work anymore.

  • @williamsteele
    @williamsteele 4 месяца назад

    The ZX81 was halted in the US when the TS1000 started production. They were both manufactured on the Timex assembly lines, so it was a simple switch over for them. (The TS1000 even had the same motherboard in it, which said ZX81 on it.)

  • @davidsandy5917
    @davidsandy5917 2 года назад

    I bought a ZX80 back in the day. The first thing we all did was buy an aftermarket keyboard for the thing.

  • @edgeeffect
    @edgeeffect 4 года назад +3

    A friend of mine had one adapted to kinda hi res graphics.... the only way to do it is a mod that switches the character map out of ROM into RAM then you can program your own characters to get a hi res "feel".

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  4 года назад +2

      Yes I was reading about it trying to understand it. Apparently if you have the expansion pack you have to modify it *and* the computer?

    • @martindejong3974
      @martindejong3974 3 года назад

      Nope, most high res drivers simply used single rows of the 8x8 characters individually, and used a bit-pattern that was nearest to what the high-res graphics demanded, the character set was NOT normally moved to RAM, although that was probably possible too, but took more RAM. In bothy cases the original display driver had to be replaced.

  • @valley_robot
    @valley_robot 2 года назад

    Incredible machine

  • @oldblueshirtguy
    @oldblueshirtguy 2 года назад +1

    We always say comp-oh-sit in the UK (which is the correct english way to say it) so given it's a British ZX81 you're correct. 🙂

  • @markryan2475
    @markryan2475 Год назад

    It is good for my soul to hear "z" pronounced "zed".

  • @sideburn
    @sideburn 8 месяцев назад

    I remember laughing at those hanging on the rack at Sav-On as a kid.

  • @Spider_Rico
    @Spider_Rico 4 года назад +4

    A magic eraser can get rid of those screen boo boos. Don't rub too hard.

  • @grahamleiper1538
    @grahamleiper1538 2 года назад +1

    Timex factory in Dundee was where the ZX81 (and ZX Spectrum) manufacturing was outsourced to. That's presumably where the link between Timex and Sinclair came from.
    Bought a similar idea 3rd party keyboard and plastic case for ZX Spectrum from DK Tronics back in the day. The Spectrum original rubber keyboard was better than the ZX81 but still terrible.
    Atari 400 had a similar membrane keyboard but without all the shortcuts.

  • @duncansnowden6857
    @duncansnowden6857 2 года назад

    Bit late to the party here, but hey... you're a time traveller. All the while you were complaining about the height of the Sinclair 16K board I was yelling, “You need a Memotech!”. They made some great ZX81 stuff. I had (have) two piggybacked 16K packs and a keyboard, which connects via another “cartridge” and had its own aluminium case, similar in construction to the RAM packs, with proper custom-made keycaps. The only drawback was that it followed the ZX81 layout precisely, with a space key instead of a bar. Otherwise it was actually one of the best keyboards I've ever used (although, as you've noticed, the ZX81's keyboard response was never very good at the best of times).
    And I say “COM-posite” too.

  • @TVPiles
    @TVPiles 2 года назад +2

    That would be HRG, a high ( 256x192 pixels lol) resolution graphics interface.

  • @valley_robot
    @valley_robot 2 года назад +1

    It was not meant to be typed on , it was a keyboard with basic command shortcuts on every key , very quick to program in basic on that little 49.00 uk machine

  • @draggonhedd
    @draggonhedd 2 года назад

    TP is probably for the remote play trigger on a cassette recorder. "Tape Play". Normally would go to a foot pedal or something for an interview style recorder

  • @johnathanstevens8436
    @johnathanstevens8436 Год назад

    Keyboard looks much improved. I actually used to like mine, until the membrane keyboard gave out.

  • @agranero6
    @agranero6 2 года назад

    All BASICS store the commands as "complete commands": they are called tokens. What is different on ZX's is that the keys emit directly those codes, so the keyboard buffer don't need to be tokenized by a routine. This routine can occupy a relatively large amount of ROM. So this is made to save ROM space not RAM.

  • @elbiggus
    @elbiggus 2 года назад +4

    COMposite is a noun, comPOSite is a verb - if you comPOSite two images together you end up with a COMposite image - so when it comes to the video signal it should be COMposite.

  • @MikePerigo
    @MikePerigo 2 года назад

    So my previous comment seems to have vanished. If this was due to a YT 'glitch' and you would be interested in my re-cased 81 then let me know and I'll repost the details.
    To summarize the earlier post, a great video with some excellent comments. Kudos on your game playing skills, especially one-handed! You got further than I normally did with two lol.
    Your pronunciation efforts were praiseworthy except for MK14. The letters M and K are pronounced 'em kay' since they stand for Microcomputer Kit (with 14 main ICs) and are not an abbreviation for mark.

  • @osgeld
    @osgeld 2 года назад +1

    wonder what the rational of keeping the stock case in the box, there's oodles of room if they had just secured the board to the box with a few stand off's (back in them days I would just use hex nuts large enough to pass the screw into the wood but not too big to short... many wooden box radio shack projects when I was a kid)

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  2 года назад +1

      I wondered that too. I suppose maybe he just didn't want to toss the case for some reason.

  • @Havanacuba1985
    @Havanacuba1985 3 года назад +1

    You could buy a variety of external keyboards and cases for the zx81

  • @kaitlyn__L
    @kaitlyn__L 3 месяца назад

    I'm pretty surprised the original builder didn't try to remove the motherboard from the case to get extra room. Especially since they already opened it up to tap-into the composite.
    Both flexibility in placement and expansion room - since everyone knew the expansions were needed to really use the ZX81 beyond like a simple external control program. It's not like they were using the built-in keyboard!
    I guess I can only conclude this user was simply not interested in using the expansions. Maybe they'd already used hobbyist machines with 1k of RAM and this seemed like plenty to them.

  • @gnuemacs1166
    @gnuemacs1166 3 года назад

    They had good pluggable keyboards for the z80

  • @SophieFeet
    @SophieFeet Год назад

    Helps if you hold the keys down in 3D Monster Maze rather than tapping them. ZX81 was my first computer... I remember the long load times. Almost as long as waiting for something to load from disk on a C64....

  • @edgeeffect
    @edgeeffect 4 года назад +3

    "TP" - "tape pause" - connecting to the mic. remote socket on the tape recorder???

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  4 года назад +3

      I figure it has to be something like that.. maybe connected to the recorders remote port?

    • @edgeeffect
      @edgeeffect 4 года назад +1

      @@TechTimeTraveller yup

  • @bob19611000
    @bob19611000 3 года назад

    I had one and my upgrade was similar but used metal not wood to mount the aftermarket keyboard. Plus also did the mod for composite video and used a green screen monitor. The issue was adding the correct capacitor value to the mod; without it yes, the brightness would be too low. Ultimately the big issue that caused me to move on was the lack of a proper printer

  • @aqs000
    @aqs000 3 года назад +3

    RAND USR 16514
    For all those who know ...

    • @BertGrink
      @BertGrink 3 года назад

      Machine code stored in a REM statement in the first line of the program.

  • @disposablebasterd
    @disposablebasterd 3 года назад +1

    Did the English Sinclair have a USA fcc message on the bottom?

    • @BertGrink
      @BertGrink 3 года назад +3

      Not those that were sold in the UK and Europe, but there was a brief period when the ZX81 was exported from England to the USA; these machines had to have the FCC approval sticker, of course.
      Soon, however, Sinclair struck a deal with Timex* that allowed Timex to manufacture and sell the machines in North America under the Timex-Sinclair brand.
      The TS1000 was followed by the TS1500, which was a modified ZX81 with 16K of memory onboard, and a redesigned ULA; this model was housed in a case that resembled the case for the ZX Spectrum, with the same kind of rubber keys as the Speccy as well.
      The last model produced by Timex-Sinclair was the TS2068 which was an enhanced ZX Spectrum: it had a slot for ROM cartridges which eliminated tape loading (and all the problems _that_ entailed), a built-in 3-voice sound generator (an AY-3-8912), two joystick ports, and some new screen modes with up to 80 or 85 characters per line and a higher colour resolution (8x1 pixels instead of the 8x8 pixel colour blocks of the Speccy). Unfortunately, these new screen modes meant that many games were not compatible with this machine, so Timex-Sinclair also had to release an "emulation" cartridge which contained an unmodified ZX Spectrum ROM.
      *At that point, Sinclair had already been using Timex as a manufacturer for the domestic models, which were made in a factory in Dundee, Scotland.

  • @josephthomas8318
    @josephthomas8318 2 года назад +1

    Here's a comment to feed the algorithm. Grow up big and strong obscure little channel

  • @marjon1703
    @marjon1703 Год назад

    There were games that used hi-res graphics that only needed the 16k ram pack. I remember a passable version of Defender.

  • @nicwilson89
    @nicwilson89 2 года назад +1

    12:48 Interesting, in the UK your pronunciation of composite would be correct :)
    I believe technically this would be correct, as the version you're trying to replace your prior pronunciation with would be a verb, you composite(your new version) things together to get a composite(your original version)

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  2 года назад +1

      I think it gets confusing as a Canadian because we take our cues both from the UK as well as the US. I've always said 'com-po-zit' rather than 'compoz-it'. And I got corrected a lot on that by American friends. When in doubt I suppose I should go with the inventors of the language.. :)

  • @akkudakkupl
    @akkudakkupl 3 года назад +4

    No idea why the guy that made this kept the ZX81 PCB inside the case, makes no sense. Would be much easier to just mount the bare board under the keyboard.

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  3 года назад +3

      It may simply have been that he didn't want to risk losing the case. I agree it's a bit odd.. would have had a lot more room to manoeuvre.

  • @davidsandy5917
    @davidsandy5917 2 года назад

    With the end of analog television, what do you use for a monitor?

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  2 года назад

      Personally I have a stock of CRT TVs.. one is a like new 32 inch JVC that never saw much use. I'm hoping those will work for the duration.

  • @ethandudeman8359
    @ethandudeman8359 2 года назад

    (if already said or proved wrong later in video please disregard thiis comment.) 17:14 may be a method of saving and loading programs via saving the signal of each keypress and then allowing the to be played back.
    To test this you could plug in the tape recorder start the recording type a short message stop recording rewind yhe tape and then power cycle the computer and hit play to see if it works

  • @melanierhianna
    @melanierhianna 2 года назад

    In the UK it was always ZX for left and right and something like '/ for UP down. I hated games that used ASWD or similar. But its what you're used to...

  • @azmoz1321
    @azmoz1321 10 месяцев назад

    Zx81 looks like proper computer in that case
    Sinclair misssd a trick , how much more plastic would it have taken to make it a full sized case / keyboard .
    Sir Clive Sinclair was my hero in the 1980’s

  • @edgeeffect
    @edgeeffect 4 года назад +1

    Good grief... I can actually remember that " TO " is shift-4... I haven't touched a ZX81 since 1982 and I still remember that..... younger me really did need to get a life.

  • @J0NNYLURVECABBAGE
    @J0NNYLURVECABBAGE 2 года назад

    If those cases had been sold with the ''computer'' they would have sold thousands more units, using that keyboard was a total nightmare.

  • @alynicholls3230
    @alynicholls3230 2 года назад

    The keyboard is a dktronics unit, must be a really early one those were kits,the more common unit is a whole case/keyboard, that came prebuilt you just removed the mainboard of the 80/81 fitted it in the dktronics case and plugged in the keyboard.
    the biggest single rampak for the zx80/81 is 96K.

  • @TheTurnipKing
    @TheTurnipKing 2 года назад +3

    The amazing thing is, for all that it may look like a toy, it actually IS a computer.
    I don't know that the wooden boi looks *better* than the ZX81. They're both kind of appealing in different ways. The original ZX81 looks like a sci-fi prop. The aesthetic appeal of woody is obvious, though.
    8:57 It's possible to upgrade the RAM on the main system board, you don't nessicarily need the ram pack. ( ruclips.net/video/14eL_oWhhXo/видео.html )
    19:00 I wonder if that was used as a means of fast entry? Rather than load and save binaries, just dump text files via serial and as far as the 81 is concerned it's being typed?

  • @dafoex
    @dafoex 2 года назад

    Given its a British micro, the way you say composite it probably fine since that's how we usually say it.

  • @ITGuyinaction
    @ITGuyinaction 3 года назад +1

    🤘😁🤘

  • @williamdawson6351
    @williamdawson6351 2 года назад

    I had the Timex-Sinclair 1000 the wooden case computer looks like a interesting mod .

  • @SolarLantern424
    @SolarLantern424 Год назад

    29:56 The new plugs you have are stereo. You need mono plugs. Looke at the bands on the plugs. The new ones are double pole. The old ones are single pole.
    30:07 - Now those are both single pole mono jacks.

  • @colinsmith6480
    @colinsmith6480 3 года назад +2

    i so would have bought that at $30, i am UK based, and my first computer was a ZX81 ¬

    • @Havanacuba1985
      @Havanacuba1985 3 года назад

      Me too , my first computer zx81 around March 84

  • @skonkfactory
    @skonkfactory 3 года назад +2

    Actually, the video output from a ZX81 isn't even composite- there's no chroma subcarrier, so it's just video, not composite video.

  • @philchurch927
    @philchurch927 2 года назад

    why not solder both ends of the ear and rec cables? using the plugs is just asking for trouble!

  • @rutabagasteu
    @rutabagasteu 2 года назад

    I had a ZX-81, but it overheated and let out the blue smoke. So if I put one in a wooden case, it would need a vent fan.
    Edit. Decades ago I saw an add on of various ram packs of 64kb so you could page them in and out, for a total of a megabyte. But I just don't understand why or how.

  • @philchurch927
    @philchurch927 2 года назад

    I put a ZX81 in a 3rd party keyboard with 16k upgrade, highres mod and sound! but you have to lose all the cases etc.!

  • @WodkaEclair
    @WodkaEclair 4 года назад +1

    ok, so I'm lost here, why do you keep correcting yourself on composite video?

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  4 года назад +1

      Bad habit. When I was growing up we always said com-po-site.. but it's supposed to be 'compozzite'. I kept mixing it up and then just decided to have fun with it.

    • @WodkaEclair
      @WodkaEclair 4 года назад

      @@TechTimeTraveller
      Is it the only word pronounced like that, or is it standard American pronunciation?

  • @estebanvillalobos2303
    @estebanvillalobos2303 3 года назад +2

    just replace the onboard 2k SRAM with a 32k SRAM chip, there are loads of instructions on how to do that. you're nuking the problem when the answer is so simple.

    • @markevans2294
      @markevans2294 2 года назад

      This ZX81 has 1k the chips in positions IC4a and IC4b being 2114s which are 4 bits wide.
      A 2k version would have a single 2016 fitted in the IC4 position.

  • @DAVIDGREGORYKERR
    @DAVIDGREGORYKERR 2 года назад

    MEMOTECH got it right first time but the TMS9918 always overheated.