Back in the day, early 80's, there were many Australian companies vying for a piece of the emerging home computer market. Microbee is probably the most prolific. It managed to get their computers into many schools. But there are many that experienced varying degrees of success. The Excalibur 64 was not one of them. Full story below but it had a short history but not many were made.
In the tradition of dragging late 20th century computers into the 21st this project hopes to recreate one using a mixture of old and new parts. Idea is to use modern components when it doesn't effect the function or IO. For example instead of using two 2764 EPROM just use one monster 1Mb 39SF010 flash IC. But then using the original 8253 timer IC for the audio and the MC6845 for the video.
No substituting with microcontrollers or FPGAs all the obsolete parts are available as new old stock so no excuses. But might use a RPi Pico for video or EPROM emulation for development but not for the final product.
If I could ever get hold of a PCB layout I would like to make an exact replica until then it will be just redoing the pdf version into Kicad and hope the orginals are accurate and I don't make too many mistakes. Already on version 3 of the PCB
Info at a glance
Manufacturer BGR Computers P/L
Introduced 1st July 1983
Discontinued 31st August 1984
Cost $399
Processor Zilog Z80 CPU Clock 4Mhz
Memory
DRAM 64kROM 16kScreen RAM 2K SRAM (separate from user RAM)
2 expansion connectorsCassette I/OVideo RF Output and RGBRS232CCentronics Parallel Port
2 Floppy drive connectors via expansion card
16 foreground and 8 background coloursDisplay: 24 lines by 40 characters and 24 lines by 80 characters, 7 x 12 dot matrix.Resolution: Low res 320 x 288,Graphics Mode: 128 programmable characters, 96 ASCII characters and 128 graphic characters.
Peripherals
A range of peripherals, or add-ons' were developed for the machine by Mick Gulovsen and these included
- A RAM upgrade from 64k to 512k
- 1200/75 baud internal modem used to connect to [[FidoNet]]
- Keyboard buffer that could buffer up to 16 characters
- HIRES graphic add-on board increased the resolution to 640 x 288 pixels
- Other peripherals had been developed by various users.
Complete Systems
Later versions were sold as a complete system and included:
- Dual 5 ¼ inch floppy disk drives
- CP/M 2.2 Operating system and later CP/M/ZCPR 3.0 and 3.1
- Programming languages Forth, Pascal, and Fortran on ROM and Tape
- Increased CPU speed from 3.5Mhz to 4Mhz
- Joystick controller
- Voice synthesiser
History
The Excalibur 64 was a kit computer released by the now defunct Australian company BGR Computers. The Excalibur 64 sold from July 1983 to August 1984.
BGR Computers was established January 1983 with the intent of developing a system similar to the MicroBee to a foot hold in both the educational and business markets. The company at time wanted to develop a complete system but the costs of development and availability of software made this prohibitive. Therefore, to enter the fledging home computer market BGR engaged an independent design company to develop a diskless kit which was first advertised in the July's 1983 edition of Electronics Australia .
More that 300 kits were sold and with the help of user groups the software catalogue grew and included, games, utilities and educational programs.
By December 1983 the Excalibur 64 was released as a complete system the retail price jumped from $399 to $699 but was fully built and tested. This price did not include a monitor and a disc controller board that could run up to four 5 ¼ or 8-inch drives would cost a further $299.
Reception
It is believed that just over 1000 units were sold. User groups were established across the country and were active
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