Powering a C64 with a USB Power Bank

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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024

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  • @ketturi
    @ketturi 3 года назад +6

    I have modified long board that runs from 5V USB. I replaced original linear regulators with Delta DC/DC modules that provide 12v, 9v and 5v analog supplies. I also added 60Hz oscillator that provides clock signal to TOC, so that cursor blinks and some software can keep time. 9V ac is not really needed for anything except some odd user port devices that had their own small transformers.

    • @BillAnt
      @BillAnt Год назад

      Nice mod, and at the same time a more reliable power regulator than the old one. Coupled with a modern switching power supply, it should be good to go for a very long time. :)

  • @ctrlaltrees
    @ctrlaltrees 3 года назад +18

    I have to admit going into this that I wasn't expecting something this comprehensive and educational. Great work as always! 👍

  • @RetroRecipes
    @RetroRecipes 3 года назад +14

    Nice work! Love the new meets old content 👍🕹️

  • @MindFlareRetro
    @MindFlareRetro 3 года назад +11

    This is awesome. A great idea to try, and damn... it works. I smiled when I saw my little pinout diagram up on your screen - glad to see it is actually useful. Great stuff as always, Jan!

  • @jameslewis2635
    @jameslewis2635 3 года назад +33

    Next challenge: Build a C64 laptop.

    • @dh2032
      @dh2032 3 года назад +1

      laptop, but was self powering and portable ☺☺It was already be don't , commodore 65, not laptop

    • @BilisNegra
      @BilisNegra 3 года назад +1

      Yeah! Of course, the luggable (SX-64) did exist, but some contraption (with the real hardware, no emulation) including a display that can run on batteries would be nice.

    • @myopinion138
      @myopinion138 2 года назад

      I have already built one

  • @genghisbunny
    @genghisbunny 3 года назад +1

    That heat shrink tubing multimeter trick at 8:03 is awesome, thanks!

  • @draggonhedd
    @draggonhedd 2 года назад +1

    I converted my SNES and Genesis to USB so i could remove the crummy 7805 and run them on clean, efficient USB power supplies. Gets rid of those huge power bricks too.

  • @alexejschepeljanski9677
    @alexejschepeljanski9677 2 года назад +1

    You could just use 19V from USB-PD Powerbank and use two step down converters to get needed voltages.

  • @daddlertl3
    @daddlertl3 3 года назад +2

    I built a similar adapter for the short boards, but added a voltage doubler IC that converts the 5V DC to 10V DC which is fed into one of the 9V AC pins. This way I can use an original SID. The output volume is a bit lower because the 10V DC is reduced by the rectifier diodes and maybe some other parts which means a bit less than 9V get to the SID. I tried it with an FPGASID, but the volume was extremely low, seems like it does not work properly if it is powered by less than 9V. Using 10V DC instead of 9V AC also prevents the AC driven timers of the CIA from working, but the system clock timers work. I found only a few games that use the AC driven timers and therefore do not work properly (maybe 1 or 2 out of 100). I used this kind of power supply for a while and it did not cause any problems. Here is a special use case for this power supply (I had no sound because I had no speakers) ruclips.net/video/RHn0FnUDhBQ/видео.html

  • @SuperRetroid
    @SuperRetroid 3 года назад +18

    Yes. YES. Join my mission to power EVERYTHING via USB! \o/

    • @JanBeta
      @JanBeta  3 года назад +6

      Your mission was definitely an inspiration for this. :D

    • @Ramdileo_sys
      @Ramdileo_sys 3 года назад +2

      @@JanBeta at 14:09..... try a MT3608 DC DC step up module for the 12v..... and a better (thick) USB cable.. one from a external HDD for example... because in the computer you probably have like 4.4v or less with that crappy cable....

    • @SuperRetroid
      @SuperRetroid 3 года назад

      @@JanBeta My thinking was to use a buck converter to get the 9v for the SID, the current draw shouldn't be too bad but there's always the danger of introducing noise.
      Main reason I didn't go too far was the need for TOC for done EasyFlash programming tools (IIRC) so I was going to look into using a 555 to generate 50hz for it. Still haven't got my head around the 555, though!

    • @Zeon01
      @Zeon01 3 года назад

      @@Ramdileo_sys what about power Delivery? could use pd trigger for 12v and use multiple USB cables with tied ground

  • @tomx5551
    @tomx5551 Год назад +1

    C64 without sound ? no way 😂 . Sid replacement price is the same as original /used/ PSU

  • @bojlerninja2351
    @bojlerninja2351 3 года назад +2

    The SID chip also generates random numbers. If it is missing or it is not working, some programs may behave strangely.
    Very good video anyway.

  • @AndyDavis007
    @AndyDavis007 2 года назад +1

    Thanks, Jan for your spirit of hey let's try this and then trying it and your work at showing the rest of us

  • @chuckherndon3251
    @chuckherndon3251 3 года назад +4

    Very cool. I was actually expecting the VIC 20 CR to work. I repaired one once and did a lot functional testing excluding the Cassette port. Ran diagnostics and Cassette was failing. Found out the fuse was blown and almost everything worked with a blown fuse!

  • @erwindewit4073
    @erwindewit4073 3 года назад +3

    Really cool idea this. Might be an idea if the SID breaks on a shortboard C64 and you're going to buy a replacement after all. Could be interesting not to replace the old dodgy power supply with a 50 euro new one, but just a 5V charger :) Even replacing the working 8580 with an Armsid and powering with 5v would be cheaper. And that leaves a precious SID as spare..

  • @pc-fan4678
    @pc-fan4678 3 года назад +1

    Finally a useful extension for old computers. Well Jan, that's something I subscribed to right away, because these extensions to these computers are much better than just these constant restorations.

  • @GeeFunk84
    @GeeFunk84 3 года назад +2

    Of all the conversions and tinkering, this has to be the smipliest yet the most useful one on the C64 (and the VIC-20). I mean, "turn key", unmodified (if you discount the SID-chip), PORTABLE C64 right out of the box? Get out of town!
    Massive congratulations, Sir!

  • @Snowsea-gs4wu
    @Snowsea-gs4wu 8 месяцев назад

    Now add a bigger power bank, add a circuit to create 9V AC the easy way with a square wave and make the Nirvana power bank! Thanks for the video!

  • @douro20
    @douro20 3 года назад +1

    I have a nice old digital personal scale with a VFD display. The battery tray was terribly corroded when I bought it so I decided after fixing the main PCB to make it USB powered since it was originally powered by four AA cells.

  • @LightTheUnicorn
    @LightTheUnicorn 3 года назад +2

    Quite impressive to see, especially the VIC-20 IMO! Could maybe make for some interesting new power supply options!

  • @MegaManNeo
    @MegaManNeo 3 года назад +1

    This is one impressive proof of concept.
    I can totally see a whole range of new and compact USB/USB-PD powered power supplies for the VC20/C64 that make use of your idea but also manage to empower the user port and long board variants without issue.
    Then again, maybe such devices too exist already, I'm not all too much involved in the hardware scene for the C64 :

  • @MisterkeTube
    @MisterkeTube 3 года назад +1

    I'm a total electronics noob, but how difficult would it be to generate 50Hz 9VAC from the 5V USB supply? Does it have to be a nice sine wave or would a +/- 9V block wave suffice? Does it even need to be AC (i.e. is it immediately rectified on the board or is there a negative voltage used on the board itself)? I would expect that a converter able to provide power to any C64 from a USB source would be even better than a solution without SID chip.

  • @TheAndjelika
    @TheAndjelika 3 года назад +2

    So let's make PCB to generate 9V AC from 5V DC... that can be done on really super small PCB that can fit somwehre inside of the C64. Only we need to calculate possible power usage on 9V AC, to really design board that can suport it. Love long and prosper

  • @AndyDavis007
    @AndyDavis007 2 года назад +1

    So I can leave the power brick at home lightening the load in the boogie bag! All I need now is the micro-projector adapter for the C64's video port to blast a white wall with the c64 glorious colour pallette; DJ'll make the sounds

  • @g-wolf9445
    @g-wolf9445 3 года назад +1

    Excellent idea and execution for a proof of concept. "Proof of concept" isn't meant to be pretty so you hit the mark with this project. Thank you for the video.

  • @SergiuszRoszczyk
    @SergiuszRoszczyk 3 года назад +2

    And here comes older Atari 8-bit series with its native 5V 1.5A power supply for everything 😀

  • @BasicBitesCA
    @BasicBitesCA 3 года назад +1

    Going mobile: yet ANOTHER reason why the C64e short boards are the best! 😎 -- JC

  • @STanriverdi
    @STanriverdi 2 месяца назад

    With the SidKick Pico, my C64 runs and produces sound using only a 5V power supply, but without 9V, the sound volume is around 30% compared to when 9V is used. I’ll look into the cause more deeply when I have time, but I wanted to mention this in case anyone is interested: if you’re planning a 5V revolution with SidKick, keep the volume loss in mind. Thanks a lot for the great videos!

    • @JanBeta
      @JanBeta  2 месяца назад

      Interesting! Maybe the SidKick uses the 9V rail as a secondary source to derive 5V from it and needs more current. I haven't looked into the SidKick at all yet but that would be interesting to figure out. :)

    • @STanriverdi
      @STanriverdi Месяц назад

      @@JanBeta Dear Jan, first of all, thank you for your response. Regarding powering the Commodore 64 with 5V DC, I kept focusing on the volume reduction issue, believing that the SidKick Pico would save me from a lot of hardware modifications. Once I connected a DAC module to the SidKick Pico and routed the sound output through it, the volume issue was resolved, and now I can use my Commodore 64 efficiently. Wishing everyone good health and great days ahead.

  • @sundhaug92
    @sundhaug92 5 месяцев назад

    Could use a USB-PD breakout board to pull 9V or 12V DC, then have a small circuit generate the 9 VAC and a voltage-divider for 5V DC

  • @daw7563
    @daw7563 3 года назад +1

    TTL voltage tolerance is 4.75-5.25V

  • @OscarSommerbo
    @OscarSommerbo 3 года назад +5

    I clicked on this, expecting some clever circuitry to get the 9V ac needed. Slightly disappointed, but I learned that the SwinSID and other replacements don't need the 9v. I assume the 9V was used by the analogue part of the SID

  • @DavePoo2
    @DavePoo2 3 года назад

    I remember the time I blew the 9v fuse in my C64c and you told me, "hey it just works without the 9v fuse in", now there is a whole video to prove it.

  • @jimcabezola3051
    @jimcabezola3051 3 года назад

    One of the most illuminating C64 videos I've ever seen! Brilliant! Mahalo!

  • @mertuckan
    @mertuckan 3 года назад +1

    What's the name of that shoot'em up game?

  • @d514-c3f
    @d514-c3f 3 года назад

    The armsid needs the 9V, otherwise the sound is very low. My C64 ran on 5V only because the 9V fuse was blown without me knowing. After I inserted the armsid I wondered why the audio was so low and it was because the 9V was missing.

  • @milk-it
    @milk-it 3 года назад

    My hat goes off to the guy who recreated that SID chip. Looking at that made me think it must have taken serious time and effort to recreate! Nice job, BTW Jan ;-). Du hast auch natürlich gut gemacht ;-).

  • @ctrlaltdude
    @ctrlaltdude 3 года назад

    When I solder DIN plugs I always cut away half of the tube you need to put the wire in with a Dremel. So it becomes cup shaped. Way easier to solder this way. Made a video to show this a long time ago.

  • @xyzconceptsYT
    @xyzconceptsYT 3 года назад

    Well, that was a fun little experiment, thanks Jan! 😀😊

  • @BilisNegra
    @BilisNegra 3 года назад

    A simple but very refreshing project, the fact that we can have sound made this really neat. And yes, just like David Murray used to be the iBook guy ages ago, you're the C64 Guy in my book (although Adrian has been a serious contender at some point).

  • @_commodore_
    @_commodore_ 3 года назад +1

    Nice video, but how long is it possible to run the c64 on that powerbank before it must be charged again?

  • @Colin_Ames
    @Colin_Ames 3 года назад

    Another interesting video. I would never have thought of powering a C64 via USB.

  • @mightywiz
    @mightywiz 2 года назад

    have you looked into the USB-C to fully power the C64 (+5 & +12volts minus the AC 9v)? reason I ask because someone created a USB-C Colecovision power adapter that supplies +5 +12 & -12 from usbc.

  • @awilliams1701
    @awilliams1701 3 года назад +1

    I wasn't sure this was going to work. When I built my PSU I bought a MIDI cable (so I didn't have to solder a DIN) and soldered a USB cable to it. At the time I was using a flimsy desoldered female USB port. The system worked, but there were like 3 games glitching with my U2+ installed. But I was very concerned about the desoldered port shorting out since it was so flimsy. So instead I bought a USB extension cord. The problem got worse because the extension cord wiring wasn't as thick as the cables I used previously. Now everything was glitching. Even BASIC would glitch. The colors were all off when the screen scrolled vertically. If you removed the U2+ the system was fine. So I measured the voltage from the board with the U2+ installed. I got 3.5V LMAO. I'm like how the hell does it work at all? So eventually I got a proper power cable and removed USB from the equation all together. Now I get like 4.9V with the U2+ installed. No glitches. The MIDI cable was certainly a problem, but USB wasn't helping either. Then again maybe the USB cables I was using was just too cheap.

  • @wernerviehhauser94
    @wernerviehhauser94 3 года назад

    I switched to emulators and a C64 mini long ago (my 4 C64/1541 sets are in a box at the other end of the country), but I would have gone for a DC/AC converter to generate 9V/50Hz from the 5V USB, the troublesome part being the need for floating ground, iirc.

  • @Ramdileo_sys
    @Ramdileo_sys 3 года назад +1

    at 14:09..... try a MT3608 DC DC step up module for the 12v..... and a better (thick) USB cable.. one from a external HDD for example... because in the computer you probably have like 4.4v or less with that crappy cable....

  • @TimothyMusson
    @TimothyMusson 3 года назад

    06:44 - I did not expect to see a Tasmanian devil _or_ a wombat in this video :)

  • @stefanweilhartner4415
    @stefanweilhartner4415 2 года назад

    a universal board could be developed with three buck-boost converters to make 5,9,12 volts. then you would be fine to use almost any input voltage.

  • @borayurt66
    @borayurt66 3 года назад

    Nice. The 9VAC can be generated from 5VDC electronically. I don't know the current required but if it is lower than 100mA there are a lot of very simple ways to create a crude AC signal. By the way you should toss that powerbank out, it is ridiculous that it drops the voltage even under 700-800mA load.

  • @zakofrx
    @zakofrx Год назад

    Could you use USB PD for the long boards.. Doesn't it allow many differnt voltages depending on what single it receives..

  • @jensschroder8214
    @jensschroder8214 3 года назад

    You said a clock would be derived from the mains frequency. What about it?
    Or simply install a NE555?
    Maybe build a step up 12 V with NE555?

  • @HelloKittyFanMan.
    @HelloKittyFanMan. 2 года назад

    If the old VIC-II GPU needs 12V but those 12 are derived from the 9 via some sort of little step-up (Where's the transformer?), then why didn't they just make the system use 12VAC in and then use a simple voltage divider to get the 9 where those are needed?

  • @BillAnt
    @BillAnt Год назад +1

    I'm quite surprised that the VIC-20 works on just 5 Volts, even though the C64 long boards were produced after the VIC-20 production has stopped. Since both machines share the same VIC-II chip, what makes the VIC-20 work yet not the C64 long boards?

    • @JanBeta
      @JanBeta  Год назад +1

      The VIC-20 used the predecessor to the C64's VIC-II. The original VIC chip only needs a 5V supply and produces graphics as well as sound output. :)

    • @BillAnt
      @BillAnt Год назад

      ​@@JanBeta- Well I guess this old dog can learn some new tricks after some 40 years. heh
      It's nuts how Commodore chose to use a 9V-AC supply just to convert it to 12V-DC inside the C64, instead of using a more efficient and reliable switching power supply. Should have used a Buck converter for the 5V rail, and a Boost converter for the 12V rail inside the power supply. After all, the switching power supply came out in 1958 by none other than IBM. ;)

  • @8_Bit
    @8_Bit 3 года назад +1

    Very cool! Interesting that those cost-reduced VIC-20s still draw nearly 50% more power than a C64, though I suppose that C64 has the benefit of even more cost-reduction.
    So if you had a 20000mAh power bank, does that mean it could run for 20 hours @ 1 A? Or is there some catch to those numbers?

  • @christiancarassai9540
    @christiancarassai9540 3 года назад

    But if 12 volts needed, for longboards, cannot be put a voltage elevator module to reach the reuired voltage. For the clock, if we dont like to have it stopped,a 555 can't do the trick? Ultimately the 12v required are cc. Even the dataset must rectify the 9vca.before use.

  • @xkeepersvk
    @xkeepersvk 11 месяцев назад

    what about using a USB C power delivery power bank? inverting from 20V dc to 5V DC & 9V AC?

  • @JVHShack
    @JVHShack 3 года назад

    This video may kill the aftermarket power supplies for the C64 and VIC-20. Go USB!!

  • @christianweyer74
    @christianweyer74 3 года назад

    Geiles Video, Jan - danke!!
    And now... the SX-64, please - powered by mobile power :-)

  • @KrautRockt
    @KrautRockt 2 года назад

    grüße, hab gerade dein clip gesehn!...geilomat🙂und mit der "kung fu flash" ist das setup für mobile geschichten ideal,oder was denkst du? PS: die swimsid ist bei mir zu leise, das sie nicht funzt.könnte das am usb netzteil liegen?...grüße aus chemniitz, ne schöne restwoche..mach weiterso und danke für deine clips, dude...ohne dich hätte ich viele fehler gemacht..beim atari ste ;-)...

  • @RalonsoF1
    @RalonsoF1 3 года назад

    Good work, again, Jan! 👍😉

  •  3 года назад +1

    Hey Jan, how long does the battery last? just curious? an hour so?

    • @3viis
      @3viis 3 года назад +2

      Lets say powebank capacity is 3500mAh and c64 uses 0,7A its should last about 4hours.

    •  3 года назад

      @@3viis Thanks for the answer

  • @PureAudioTones
    @PureAudioTones 3 года назад

    Watched the video with great joy 🙂
    Next step could be modifying the C64 for full usb power. I guess it can be done with some voltage converters and 50Hz square wave.

    • @vectorjoe
      @vectorjoe 2 года назад

      If you know how to do it, go ahead. The retro scene needs ideas like yours.

  • @Dorff_Meister
    @Dorff_Meister 3 года назад

    That's amazing! Great work.

  • @jeffm2787
    @jeffm2787 3 года назад

    Keep it around 5% on the 5 volt rail. I've never seen 10% in any specs for 5 volt devices, not to say they don't exist. Nice work.

  • @MichaelVx
    @MichaelVx 3 года назад

    i think the whole long board use the voltage after the 7805 so if you power the 5 volts right at the out pin of the 7805 the C64 should power up fine if i have a C64 i would have checked how the other 12 volts chips run from a 9 volts source

    • @bryanminugh9680
      @bryanminugh9680 3 года назад

      long-board used "pulls", the VIC II and 6561 SID (both 12V) are a sad result when inserted in a short board (8580 SID with "new tech" HMOS-chemistry transistors)

  • @wimwiddershins
    @wimwiddershins 3 года назад

    Nice one Jan!
    I was wondering how you were going to get sound back in? Great stuff!

  • @Thomaniac
    @Thomaniac 3 года назад

    Nice experiment and interesting result! :-)

  • @budman85
    @budman85 3 года назад

    Hey would it work with the TYPE S 12V 7.0L Jump Starter Power Bank with USB C Charging

  • @bitoxic
    @bitoxic 3 года назад

    HEY @JanBeta! What was the specs of the power bank and how long did the c64c lasted with a game running in the background on a full charged power bank?!

  • @ltrojano
    @ltrojano 3 года назад

    How about 50/60Hz clock generation circuit for CIA chip? 9VAC is also used for Tape motor, I assume this will not work either. 8 bit Atari used 5V only which is cool.

  • @patrickdeunhouwer5926
    @patrickdeunhouwer5926 3 года назад

    And a C16 should also work right? Only has a 9volt in and 7805 5 volt converter?

  • @thelostc
    @thelostc 3 года назад

    Hello Nice project. Now you could add a circuit that generates the sine wave, with an ICL8038 type integrated and a small Audio transformer, to generate the 9vac and use at least the original SID. But is 9vac not also used to clock the CIA?

    • @ltrojano
      @ltrojano 3 года назад +1

      Yes it is. You may easily find if it works by observing cursor blinking on startup screen.

  • @myopinion138
    @myopinion138 2 года назад

    It works but i use a better battery pack , Good video

  • @stephenvalente3296
    @stephenvalente3296 3 года назад

    Excellent work as always

  • @falksweden
    @falksweden 3 года назад +1

    Next silly experiment would be to build in some cells into the chassis, and make a rechargeable, wireless C64 :D

    • @vectorjoe
      @vectorjoe 3 года назад +2

      Or maybe use the new vic2 replacements with hdmi out and search for a portable, battery powered tft screen with 1amp usb port on it....

  • @thomasleeuwen124
    @thomasleeuwen124 3 года назад

    It would be interesting to see some kind of circuit as an add-in board to make 9VAC out of the 5V to build into the c64 and ditch the 9VAC PSU requirement altogether.

    • @vectorjoe
      @vectorjoe 3 года назад

      Maybe a 12v usb c board that has a stepdown converter to 5v and can generate 9v ac or something...

    • @bryanminugh9680
      @bryanminugh9680 3 года назад

      Any electric R/C model with reverse has the "H bridge" DC to AC circuit.

  • @beatingbytes1692
    @beatingbytes1692 3 года назад

    5V DC only supply should make the timers in the CIA-chips fail, because the need the AC flanc for triggering the timers. Some programs needing those timers may fail.

    • @JanBeta
      @JanBeta  3 года назад

      Yup, mentioned that in the video. But I don’t know of any software that fails because of that. Would be interesting to see.

  • @miserychordia
    @miserychordia 3 года назад

    is there a story behind the "lips" sticker on your monitor ? in every episode i kinda think of it (damn aspergers syndrome) :-P i realize it's the last part from a philips sticker..but would be fun to hear if there is a point to it? :-P i remember seeing a synthband who erased a part of the R in Roland on the back of their synths so it said Poland instead of Roland :)

  • @Breakfast_of_Champions
    @Breakfast_of_Champions 3 года назад +2

    Theoretically a very simple USB-C adapter should be able to provide both voltages. Another micro controller to breathe life into the 64😌

    • @Draknem
      @Draknem 3 года назад

      There is no AC in power delivery standards, but the chips may be able to run from 9v dc anyway.

    • @JanBeta
      @JanBeta  3 года назад

      Yes, that’s true. You would still need some extra circuitry to make the AC parts of the system work though. But at least you would probably be able to use an original SID. :)

  • @MakeKasprzak
    @MakeKasprzak 3 года назад

    Awesome.

  • @gertsy2000
    @gertsy2000 3 года назад

    Amazing.

  • @elfenmagix8173
    @elfenmagix8173 3 года назад +1

    Swap out the 6502 on the Vic20 and put in a 65C02 on its place. I did this back on the 80s and my Vic20 runs cooler and a bit faster from the mod.

  • @AdamKlein77
    @AdamKlein77 3 года назад

    This is such a good idea.
    Is there room in the case to build in a battery internally?

  • @gile849
    @gile849 3 года назад

    Power Lips TV from power bank :D

  • @petercaspari680
    @petercaspari680 3 года назад

    Another fantastic video - thanks Jan. You make me want to buy a broken C64 just for fun.
    I have already tried something like this with my short board but found when plugged into a wall socket I got rolling noise on the screen. Anyone have any ideas how to get rid of it? I tried 3 wall warts - all noisy to different degrees. I tried adding a 1000uf capacitor - no change.

  • @Octamed
    @Octamed 3 года назад

    Set it up in a car with one of those DC DVD screens with video in :)

  • @giuseppelavecchia775
    @giuseppelavecchia775 3 года назад

    Jan,geniale,come sempre

  • @RadolfDerGelehrte
    @RadolfDerGelehrte 3 года назад

    Wie sieht das denn aus mit dem C16? Der macht ja aus den 9V des Netzteils intern 5V, die dann jeder IC bekommt. Sollte doch direkt funktionieren. Oder?

    • @vectorjoe
      @vectorjoe 2 года назад

      Probier aus und sag im discord von jan bescheid ;-)

    • @RadolfDerGelehrte
      @RadolfDerGelehrte 2 года назад

      @@vectorjoe Das Problem dürfte die Datasette sein, denn die läuft mit 9V wenn ich das richtig im Schaltplan lese und gemessen habe.

    • @vectorjoe
      @vectorjoe 2 года назад

      @@RadolfDerGelehrte soweit auch von jan aus die aussage im video und im discord. Muss man sich halt fragen ob man sich in zeiten von arduino basierten emulierten datasetten und disklaufwerken noch eine echte datasette geben will.

  • @reiyv139
    @reiyv139 3 года назад

    Nice. Although I couldn't hear any sound from the Swinsid in the video !?

    • @JanBeta
      @JanBeta  3 года назад +1

      The volume was turned down pretty low on the TV while I tried the swinsid so it doesn’t translate very well through my lapel mic. There definitely is sound! :)

  • @HifiCentret
    @HifiCentret Год назад

    Unless you use an ARMSID two more things are missing: Support for paddles and mouse!

  • @darrennolan3332
    @darrennolan3332 3 года назад

    Next task is to be able to plug it into your car and get the car display to show the output video.

  • @ms-ex8em
    @ms-ex8em 2 года назад

    do u know much about programming ? i want to write an Amiga emulator for Linux and windows and ubuntu too! thanks.....

  • @FloatingFatMan
    @FloatingFatMan 3 года назад

    Awesome work! Can you do the same with a Sinclair Spectrum?

    • @JanBeta
      @JanBeta  3 года назад

      That’s a bit trickier, the older models need a 12V rail for the RAM as well as 5V for the rest of the system if I remember correctly. The original power supply is 9V DC. You would either have to add a 9V converter to the USB power bank or modify the mainboard.

  • @volvo245glt
    @volvo245glt 3 года назад

    Interesting experiment and great video! 😊
    I've actually done something similar, replacing the 5 V linear regulator in the original power supply with an iPad charger.

    • @stevethepocket
      @stevethepocket 3 года назад

      Like, actually modified the brick? Or just cut some of the wires and bypassed it?

    • @volvo245glt
      @volvo245glt 3 года назад

      @@stevethepocket Yes, modified the brick by removing the circuit board to make room for the slightly trimmed down charger.
      Looks original from the outside and works great so I'm happy. 😀

    • @stevethepocket
      @stevethepocket 3 года назад

      @@volvo245glt So is it like this, where it only provides 5V and you need a replacement sound chip? Because I've thought about doing the "rip open a couple wall warts and dump their guts into an empty power brick" thing, but I'd insist on having the 9V AC rail, and wall warts that put out AC don't just spawn in thrift store junk bins like DC ones do.

    • @espressomatic
      @espressomatic 3 года назад +1

      @@stevethepocket 9vac wall warts while not readily available in a thrift stores are easily obtainable online from electronics/parts resellers, such as Jameco. $10-$11. Easily opened to free their guts and ready to re-brick in no time.

  • @TheDarkmore
    @TheDarkmore 3 года назад

    Nice, and I cannot power an intel compute stick from batteries and that only needs 5V 2A, yet I could not find a stable voltage regulator (stepdown from 7.4V to 5V).

    • @bsgconsulting
      @bsgconsulting 3 года назад

      Why use a linear regulator and not something switching?

    • @TheDarkmore
      @TheDarkmore 3 года назад

      @Lassi Kinnunen 81 I did, but the stick reboots randomly, so I disassembled my old powerbank took out the four 18650 batteries and made my own powerbank: USB-C port and stepup to 9V, TP5100 + Battery Balancer board. The Li batteries are: 2 parallel and then in series (gives 7.4V and around 5A) then to the voltage regulator stepdown to 5V. Charging works, I power an LCD (6.5") through the LCD control board and the intel stick is just a z8350 (I want to upgrade it to M36Y30 once it works). Fun thing is that the first test were OK, I did run multiple games on it, like Ori, Dark Souls 1, Dead Space 1 for 10-20 minutes, but now the stick reboots between 1-5 minutes. It could be still not enough Amps, maybe I should limit the stick with Throttlestop, but my guess is on the cheap voltage regulator.

    • @TheDarkmore
      @TheDarkmore 3 года назад

      @Lassi Kinnunen 81 Than you for the tips, yes the first thing I changed was the cable and it got stable with a proper wire, but only for a while. I tried multiple voltage regulators but all cheap boards and I only have a VERY basic multimeter (which I do not trust too much), yes the problem must be voltage dips, maybe I will buy a proper voltage regulator from pololu or other.

  • @DavePoo2
    @DavePoo2 3 года назад

    So what you are telling me is, you can install a VIC-20 in a car?

  • @Sebastian959
    @Sebastian959 3 года назад

    C64 ohne Sound? Naja wenn man es mir als Office PC nutzt 😄. Schönes Video!

    • @vectorjoe
      @vectorjoe 3 года назад

      Wieso ohne sound? Hast du dir das video angesehen?

    • @Sebastian959
      @Sebastian959 3 года назад +1

      @@vectorjoe ja… hatte einen internen Fehler bei der Übersetzung .

    • @Sebastian959
      @Sebastian959 3 года назад +1

      😀

  • @DumahBrazorf
    @DumahBrazorf 3 года назад +1

    Why don't use a power bank with power delivery and get 9V?

    • @beatingbytes1692
      @beatingbytes1692 3 года назад

      You need the voltage as AC, so you have to build a DC inverter. You can do this by using an EGS002 Board an some parts around this module.

    • @bryanminugh9680
      @bryanminugh9680 3 года назад

      Did you say 9Volts? ..that regulator running the VIC II and SID on a long board has 15V going in, so the voltage to VIC II and SID doesn't "droop"

    • @bryanminugh9680
      @bryanminugh9680 3 года назад

      @@drmr_music the brick has a spool of copper wire on the transformer magnetic core that goes direct into the C=64. The polarity of the current running through the circuit loop charges a cap as if it were a battery, then reverses direction. When reversed, that charge "stacks" on top of another cap, like putting two batteries stacked inside a flashlight body. A rectifier "opens" like a pressure flapper valve and dumps the doubled voltage into another cap feeding 15V into the 7812 voltage regulator. The same "charge pump" voltage multiplier ladder, but with many more cascaded stages, is in those stun wands that make "lightning bolts" from a 9V smoke detector battery.

    • @bryanminugh9680
      @bryanminugh9680 3 года назад

      @@drmr_music "to then immediately rectify that 9V AC back into 9V DC" In the VIC-20, it was just that simple..

  • @interlace84
    @interlace84 3 года назад

    So cool!! Burning question; what kinda battery life are we talking about? 😁

    • @vectorjoe
      @vectorjoe 3 года назад

      Well it draws 5 v 0.7 A, so thats 3.5 watt. Check the watthour rating of your battery. If your battery has amp hour given as capacity....well it draws 0.7 amps ...

    • @interlace84
      @interlace84 3 года назад +1

      @@vectorjoe
      P (w) = U (v) * I (a)
      U = I * R
      R (Ω) = U / I
      I just remembered :) thanks!

  •  3 года назад +1

    Nice! I guess the voltage (which is already DC) for original SID can be provided to add an internal DC-to-DC boost converter. Also, the missing TOD clock of CIAs can be clocked with external circuit providing 50Hz (in case of PAL) instead using of AC (even using an existing crystal oscillator somewhere on the board with the right divided ratio, if that can be easily derived that way). However these would need modifications anyway ... And still, lack of power for datasette and 9VAC on the user port are still issues. That cannot be solved easily. In theory, there can be some boost converter there too, as most devices using AC from C64 will use a rectifier anyway to convert it DC, but that's a dangerous game, also then not exactly the same voltage should be provided in DC and some can assume the voltage drop of a rectifier used by the device, but we cannot know what it uses exactly ... I would say, with a SID replacement, the missing working CIA TODs can be an issue, some software uses that for timing purposes. Probably not so common thing, though.

  • @felixokeefe
    @felixokeefe 2 года назад

    Just add a wireless video sender & receiver to this and you can play c64 games from the comfort of your sofa/couch using real hardware