Micro­power

  

Volume 1 · Number 2 · September 1981

Page 10 of 33

2.7 inches from the bottom edge and 3.3 inches from the left edge of the board. Cut this track somewhere in the middle.

  1. Connect the left hand plated through hole of the latter track to A12 at the edge connector – this is line 42 of Nasbus.
  2. Connect the right hand plated through hole of the track to pin 19 of the bottom EPROM socket.
  3. Select the addresses for the four sockets by connecting pad 5 to the appropriate two decode pads (remember, you’ve got 8K there now). The two 4K blocks selected need not be adjacent, but they must have different values for A12, because this line is used in the decoding. For example you could use blocks C000 and F000, but not C000 and E000.
  4. Because the modifications have inverted the order of the decoding lines the addresses of the EPROM sockets are no longer in the correct order. Thus if you have selected addresses C000 – DFFF you will find that the start address are:–

IC27 C000   IC28 D000   IC29 C800   IC30 D800

That completes the mods for the RAM A card. For just a little work, and using no extra chips, you get an extra 4K out of the board by replacing 2708s.

The Nascom 1 owner can also modify his main board to take 2716s in the monitor position; if you put a 2716 in each socket you can have two monitors on your machine, selected by a switch on the CS lines. Here are details of the modifications required.

  1. On the soldered side of the board a wide track runs from pin 21 of IC38 to a plated through hole near the edge of the board. Either cut this track with a sharp knife, or break the plated through connection with a small sharp twist drill. This disconnects both EPROM sockets from the −5 volt line.
  2. Also on the soldered side of the board, a wide track connects pin 19 of IC38 to the +12 volts lines. This track should be cut with a sharp knife near to pin 19.
  3. Connect pins 21 and 24 of IC38 with a short wire link
  4. Connect an insulated wire link from the solder pad of pin 19, IC38 to the solder pad of pin 2, IC36. Thus provides address line A10 for the 2716s.
  5. Tie pins 4 and 5 of IC36 together. This gives a 2K decode instead of two separate 1k decodes.
  6. Remove IC44 from its socket, bend pins 8, 11 and 13 to a horizontal position, and replace the IC.
  7. Fit a single-pole double-throw switch at some convenient point in your computer. Link the centre of this switch to pin 8 of IC44. The two outer connectors of the switch are tied to +5 volts through 4k7 resistors; they are then linked to pads 8 and 11 of IC44.

You can now fit a 2K monitor in each of sockets IC38 and IC39. The switch selects which monitor is in use.

Page 10 of 33