Microprocessor Trainer

T

Tom Watt

Guest
Hello,

I am wanting to design upgrades for the Commodore 64 and eventually the
Amiga. There doesn't seem to be any 6502 based microprocessor trainers
available today, and the 68000 ones seem to expensive.

What's a good trainer to start with?

I like this one:
http://www.ciebookstore.com/bookstore/catNo/42/productid/158/addtocart.asp

It's made by Elenco and can be purchased cheaper elsewhere:
http://www.gibsonteched.com/emm8000k.html

What I really like about this Elenco one is that you build each section
one at a time and run excersizes along the way. No other I know of
works this way and I really like that idea, not to mention it's cheap
which is kind of a requirement. :)

I hear the 8085 is obsolete, but so is the 6502.. So is this a good one
to start with or should I look elsewhere?

Thanks,

Tom
 
Oh and I really like this one too:
http://emacinc.com/trainers/primer.htm

Lots of upgrade options and still very good price if you build it
yourself. But, I don't think you "learn as you build".
 
On 17 Jan 2005 20:51:45 -0800, "Tom Watt" <tom@wattservices.com>
wrote:

Hello,

I am wanting to design upgrades for the Commodore 64 and eventually the
Amiga. There doesn't seem to be any 6502 based microprocessor trainers
available today, and the 68000 ones seem to expensive.

What's a good trainer to start with?

I like this one:
http://www.ciebookstore.com/bookstore/catNo/42/productid/158/addtocart.asp

It's made by Elenco and can be purchased cheaper elsewhere:
http://www.gibsonteched.com/emm8000k.html

What I really like about this Elenco one is that you build each section
one at a time and run excersizes along the way. No other I know of
works this way and I really like that idea, not to mention it's cheap
which is kind of a requirement. :)

I hear the 8085 is obsolete,
I understand the Pentium 4 will execute the 8085... no, I'm
thinking 8086, never mind...

but so is the 6502.. So is this a good one
to start with or should I look elsewhere?
Here's a blast from the past, the original 6502 'trainer' board:

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=1247&item=5158245508

Warning, it doesn't work, it may be just that Zener at the
connector but there's no way to be sure (this is really a collector's
item at least as much as a piece of electronics). The 6502 proccesor
chip should be easy enough to get, but I'd worry about replacing those
two 40-pin peripheral/ROM chips...

Thanks,

Tom
-----
http://mindspring.com/~benbradley
 

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