Building Retro Computers
Resurrect the Z80 and 6502 era by designing and building your own 8-bit computer from scratch
Step back to 1980 and build a functional computer using discrete chips and minimal components. Projects range from simple Z80-based boards to complete 6502 systems with display and keyboard. You'll learn digital logic, microprocessor architecture, memory management, and assembly language. The magic moment arrives when you type a command and see output—a computer you built with your hands.
Jak zacząć
- 1Choose a simple design (Grant Searle's Z80 is legendary for beginners)
- 2Source vintage or modern chips (eBay, Digi-Key, specialty suppliers)
- 3Build the power supply and clock circuit first
- 4Wire the CPU, ROM, RAM, and I/O modules on breadboard
- 5Write bootloader code and load it into EEPROM
- 6Test and debug until you get a prompt
Co będziesz potrzebować
- Z80 or 6502 CPUNiezbędne~$5
- RAM & ROM ChipsNiezbędne~$10
- Large BreadboardNiezbędne~$20
- Power Supply & RegulatorsNiezbędne~$30
- EEPROM ProgrammerNiezbędne~$20
- Oscilloscope (for debugging)Przydatne~$150
Gdzie się uczyć
Plot twisty
Sposoby na urozmaicenie, gdy podstawy się znudzą.
- Add graphics capabilities with discrete logic
- Build a Forth interpreter for your CPU
- Create a minimal operating system
- Build a retro game console variant
- Design a Z80 calculator with matrix keyboard
Debugging is tedious but extremely satisfying when it works. Break into stages: power supply → basic clock → CPU running → ROM → RAM → I/O. Celebrate each stage.
The Z80 processor from 1976 is still manufactured and used today—you can run code on hardware almost 50 years old.
Podobne klimaty
Jeśli to nie trafiło, spróbuj jednego z tych.
- Oscilloscope Signal AnalysisVisualize invisible electronic signals and decode the digital heartbeat of circuits
- Building a DIY Power SupplyDesign and construct regulated power supplies, both linear and switching variants, for your electronic projects
- Soldering Decorative Circuit Board ArtCreate beautiful abstract art by soldering components and traces onto circuit boards as visual designs
- PCB Design with KiCadDesign custom circuit boards from concept to manufacturing-ready files using free, professional software