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Commodore CBM-II

The Commodore CBM-II series is a short-lived range of 8-bit personal computers from Commodore Business Machines (CBM), released in 1982 and intended as a follow-on to the Commodore PET series.

Commodore CBM-II
ManufacturerCommodore Business Machines (CBM)
TypePersonal computer
Release date1982; 41 years ago (1982)
Discontinued1984; 39 years ago (1984)
Operating systemMicrosoft BASIC 4.0
CPUMOS Technology 6509 @ 1 or 2 MHz, Intel 8088 or Zilog Z80A @ 4 MHz option
Memory128 or 256 KB
GraphicsVIC-II (320 × 200, 16 colors, sprites, raster interrupt) or 6545 CRTC
SoundSID 6581 (osc, wave, filter, ADSR, ring)
ConnectivityRS-232, A/V, digital tape, ROM cartridge, audio minijack, mains power, parallel IEEE-488 (Commodore floppy drives and printers)
PredecessorCommodore PET

Technical description edit

The CBM-II has two incarnations, the P series (P = personal, or, home use) and the B series (B = business use). The B series was available with a built-in monochrome monitor (hi-profile) with detached keyboard, and also as a single unit with built-in keyboard but no monitor (lo-profile). These machines are often referred to as the "Porsche PETs" due to incorrect rumors that the case was designed by Porsche. Though Commodore did initially consult Porsche for a case design, it proved too expensive to produce, so Commodore enlisted designer Ira Velinski to create one based on the original PET prototype.[1][2][3][4]

The P-series uses the VIC-II 40-column color video chip like the Commodore 64 (C64). It also includes two standard Atari-style joystick ports. The 6509 CPU runs at 1 MHz in the P-series due to the use of the VIC-II chip.

Both B and P-series machines have a 6581 SID chip, although the B-series' 2 MHz clock speed makes it impossible to read any of the SID's registers.

The B-series uses a 6545 CRTC video chip to give an 80-column "green screen" monochrome output more suitable for word processing and other business use than the VIC-II's 40-column display. Most models have the Motorola 68B45 installed which is a pin-compatible variant rather than the MOS 6545A1 2 MHz part. On the B-series the 6509 CPU runs at 2 MHz. The joystick ports are not present on the B-series, but the connector is still on the motherboard.

CBM-IIs are the only Commodore 8-bit machines with an RS-232 port instead of the standard user port. The I/O registers for the user port are still present (as they're an internal function of the 6522 chips) but there is no connector for it on the motherboard.

A cartridge slot is also included on the machines; however, no known cartridge software was developed.

The B-series retained the IEEE-488 interface from the PET instead of the IEC serial interface on the VIC-20 and C64. The small amount of software Commodore developed for the B-series was distributed on 500k 8050 format disks rather than the 170k 4040/1541 format.

Features common to both the P and B-series included a MOS Technology 6509 CPU, an enhanced version of the venerable 6502, that was capable of addressing up to 1 megabyte of RAM via bank switching (however, no CBM-II model came with more than 256 kilobytes of RAM). The sound chip is the 6581 SID, the same one that was used in the popular C64 but with some limitations as it was over-clocked to 2 MHz. Additionally, the CBM-II has an industry-standard RS-232 serial interface and an IEEE-488 parallel bus (for use by disk drives and printers) just like the PET/CBM series. The CBM-II's built-in operating system uses an enhanced version of CBM BASIC version 4.0.

An optional Intel 8088-based coprocessor board allows the CBM-II series to run CP/M-86 1.1 and MS-DOS 1.25; however, the computers were not IBM PC compatible and very little, if any, software taking advantage of this capability ever appeared. The coprocessor board only runs on high-profile machines due to power supply and mechanical spacing requirements. A Z80 card was also announced if the user wished to run CP/M-80, as well as a Zilog Z8001 board, but none are known to exist. The 8088 board never reached production apparently because of difficulties getting it to work with the system.

The CBM-II line uses a complicated RAM banking scheme. Bank 0 contains the video RAM on P-series machines and is empty on B-series machines. Banks 1-4 contain the main system RAM, with Bank 15 containing the system ROMs, cartridge ROM, I/O registers, video RAM on B-series machines, and a small amount of RAM to store system variables. BASIC program text is stored in Bank 1. On 128 KB models, Bank 2 contains all BASIC variables, however on 256 KB models they're spread out among Banks 2–4. However, unlike the later released Commodore 128, the CBM-IIs do not have the system ROMs mapped into banks other than 15, which has very limited program RAM (1k free, plus a 4k expander board could be installed). This meant that software had to include its own OS routines to handle device I/O and interrupts, as it is not possible to "far call" code across different memory banks. In theory, if Banks 5–14 were filled, up to 1 MB of RAM could be installed, but in practice the computer is limited to 256 KB as the PLA chip does not have enough address lines for it. Passing data between different banks requires use of the register at $1 which selects the banks to be read from and written to via LDA (zero page),Y and STA (zero page),Y CPU opcodes. The register at $0 selects the bank where the CPU fetches instructions from, which will default to 15 ($F) on power up.

The BASIC included with the CBM-II series is known as BASIC 4.0+. It contains the enhanced BASIC 4.0 disk commands as well as a few other added features for structured programming and error trapping.

Commodore had plans for a wide variety of RAM configurations as well as slimline and "high profile" models. The slimline machines were all-in-one units while the high-profile models had a separate keyboard and attached swivel-mount monitor. Both slimline and high-profile models have a connector for internal floppy drives and coprocessor boards, although only the latter have physical room in the case and a sufficient power supply for them. No production machines had internal floppy drives, however these likely would have been a half-height variant of the 8050. Most of the planned CBM-II models never made it past the prototype stage. Originally, there would be four models in each series, with memory increasing in 64 KB increments. 64k and 192k models were dropped early in development and no such models were produced.

In the end, the only CBM-II models to enter production and be sold to end users were the B128/600, B256/700, CBM-128/710, and PAL model P500s. The B128 and P500 were slimline models with no internal disk drives or attached monitor while the CBM 128 and B256 were high-profile models. The B128 was the biggest selling of the three.

 
A Commodore CBM 610, the European version of a Commodore B128
 
Connectors on the back of a CBM 610
reset, RS-232C, datasette, cartridge 44-pin, GND, audio, mains, IEEE-488, power switch, fuse
 
Mainboard and power supply of a CBM 610

The production naming within the United States and Canada was the B128/B256 and CBM128-80/CBM 256-80 while in Europe they were known as the 600 and 700 series respectively (no "B" in front of the model number). The P machine was known worldwide as the 500 series. There are prototype models though such as the B500 (earlier B128 design) and B700 (earlier CBM 128-80/CBM 256-80 design) known to exist.

Model variants[5]
Model RAM co-processor
610 128 KB
620 256 KB
630 256 KB co-processor card
710 128 KB
720 256 KB
730 256 KB co-processor card

History edit

Due to the popularity of the C64, the P-series was cancelled in the United States before it could be officially released; however, a few dealers who received preproduction units sold them. As the P-series had not then been certified by the FCC, Commodore were threatened with legal action and were forced to recall them. It was rumored that all recalled P-series machines were destroyed, however a handful of them are known to exist in private collections. At least one model, the P500, was commercially released in Europe but only sold in small numbers.

The most common of the B-series was the low-profile B128[1] (called the CBM 610 in Europe), which had 128 kilobytes of RAM. The B128 did not sell well, and ultimately Commodore's inventory was liquidated by Protecto Enterprizes, a large Commodore mail order dealer based in Chicago, Illinois.[6] The Protecto ads for the B128 bundle, including a dual disk drive, monitor and printer, appeared in various computer magazines for several years.

The CBM-II line sold poorly and ended up being extremely expensive to manufacture, as well as difficult to develop software for. Commodore did not release any sales figures or an official discontinuation date, however the B128/600 is the most common model in the lineup. Production ended at some point during 1984 and Commodore liquidated their remaining inventory in 1985. CBM-IIs were still being sold in Germany up to 1987. The exact number of CBM-IIs produced is unclear, however serial numbers indicate that at least 10,000 B128s were shipped along with a few dozen to a few thousand of the other models. It is believed that Commodore produced at least 5000–6000 of each machine.

After discontinuing the CBM-II range, Commodore handed its documentation, schematics, and all other information over to CBUG, the Chicago B128 Users Group.

Among these materials was a prototype motherboard using an Intel 8088 processor, which hints at the possibility the line could have been made IBM compatible if production had continued.[citation needed]

CBUG went on to develop a library of software for the computers. Its library, however, paled in comparison to the large software libraries enjoyed by the Commodore 64 and VIC-20.

The rounded case design of the high-profile CBM-II series would later be used in redesigned versions of the original PET/CBM computers, (such as the CBM8296) that the CBM-II line was designed to replace. In addition, the memory banking scheme of the CBM-II would be reused on the Commodore 128 with a few slight modifications.

References edit

  1. ^ "Commodore 256: The 8-bit that never was". 21 July 2017.
  2. ^ "The Commodore CBM-II Page".
  3. ^ "Secret Weapons of Commodore: The 6509s: The P500, B128/256, B500, 600, 700, BX128/256".
  4. ^ Commodore PET 200 at old-computers.com 2010-11-21 at the Wayback Machine, accessed 25 August 2014
  5. ^ "Under the Hood of the CBM 610". 2012-11-09. Retrieved 2016-04-28.
  6. ^ "Commodore B Series The Dusk of the Day".
Notes
  1. ^ a Neither the CBM128-80 nor the B128 are to be confused with the very different and reasonably successful Commodore 128 (also known as CBM 128 and C128), Commodore's final 8-bit home/personal computer, released in 1985.
  2. ^ a The CBM-II, due to a quirk in the input, if you do the command "POKE 0,35" will lock everything, and all of the memory will be filled with 00's and FF's.

External links edit

  • The Commodore CBM-II page — By Steve Gray
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived December 9, 2006) — By Edward Shockley
  • Under the Hood of the Commodore P500 — By Ullrich von Bassewitz
  • The Commodore 500, 600 and 700 Computers — By David Viner
  • Hires graphics-board — By Winfried Falkenhahn
  • Michau's CBM-II page — By Michał Pleban

commodore, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, cita. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Commodore CBM II news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed April 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The Commodore CBM II series is a short lived range of 8 bit personal computers from Commodore Business Machines CBM released in 1982 and intended as a follow on to the Commodore PET series Commodore CBM IIManufacturerCommodore Business Machines CBM TypePersonal computerRelease date1982 41 years ago 1982 Discontinued1984 39 years ago 1984 Operating systemMicrosoft BASIC 4 0CPUMOS Technology 6509 1 or 2 MHz Intel 8088 or Zilog Z80A 4 MHz optionMemory128 or 256 KBGraphicsVIC II 320 200 16 colors sprites raster interrupt or 6545 CRTCSoundSID 6581 3 osc 4 wave filter ADSR ring ConnectivityRS 232 A V digital tape ROM cartridge audio minijack mains power parallel IEEE 488 Commodore floppy drives and printers PredecessorCommodore PET Contents 1 Technical description 2 History 3 References 4 External linksTechnical description editThe CBM II has two incarnations the P series P personal or home use and the B series B business use The B series was available with a built in monochrome monitor hi profile with detached keyboard and also as a single unit with built in keyboard but no monitor lo profile These machines are often referred to as the Porsche PETs due to incorrect rumors that the case was designed by Porsche Though Commodore did initially consult Porsche for a case design it proved too expensive to produce so Commodore enlisted designer Ira Velinski to create one based on the original PET prototype 1 2 3 4 The P series uses the VIC II 40 column color video chip like the Commodore 64 C64 It also includes two standard Atari style joystick ports The 6509 CPU runs at 1 MHz in the P series due to the use of the VIC II chip Both B and P series machines have a 6581 SID chip although the B series 2 MHz clock speed makes it impossible to read any of the SID s registers The B series uses a 6545 CRTC video chip to give an 80 column green screen monochrome output more suitable for word processing and other business use than the VIC II s 40 column display Most models have the Motorola 68B45 installed which is a pin compatible variant rather than the MOS 6545A1 2 MHz part On the B series the 6509 CPU runs at 2 MHz The joystick ports are not present on the B series but the connector is still on the motherboard CBM IIs are the only Commodore 8 bit machines with an RS 232 port instead of the standard user port The I O registers for the user port are still present as they re an internal function of the 6522 chips but there is no connector for it on the motherboard A cartridge slot is also included on the machines however no known cartridge software was developed The B series retained the IEEE 488 interface from the PET instead of the IEC serial interface on the VIC 20 and C64 The small amount of software Commodore developed for the B series was distributed on 500k 8050 format disks rather than the 170k 4040 1541 format Features common to both the P and B series included a MOS Technology 6509 CPU an enhanced version of the venerable 6502 that was capable of addressing up to 1 megabyte of RAM via bank switching however no CBM II model came with more than 256 kilobytes of RAM The sound chip is the 6581 SID the same one that was used in the popular C64 but with some limitations as it was over clocked to 2 MHz Additionally the CBM II has an industry standard RS 232 serial interface and an IEEE 488 parallel bus for use by disk drives and printers just like the PET CBM series The CBM II s built in operating system uses an enhanced version of CBM BASIC version 4 0 An optional Intel 8088 based coprocessor board allows the CBM II series to run CP M 86 1 1 and MS DOS 1 25 however the computers were not IBM PC compatible and very little if any software taking advantage of this capability ever appeared The coprocessor board only runs on high profile machines due to power supply and mechanical spacing requirements A Z80 card was also announced if the user wished to run CP M 80 as well as a Zilog Z8001 board but none are known to exist The 8088 board never reached production apparently because of difficulties getting it to work with the system The CBM II line uses a complicated RAM banking scheme Bank 0 contains the video RAM on P series machines and is empty on B series machines Banks 1 4 contain the main system RAM with Bank 15 containing the system ROMs cartridge ROM I O registers video RAM on B series machines and a small amount of RAM to store system variables BASIC program text is stored in Bank 1 On 128 KB models Bank 2 contains all BASIC variables however on 256 KB models they re spread out among Banks 2 4 However unlike the later released Commodore 128 the CBM IIs do not have the system ROMs mapped into banks other than 15 which has very limited program RAM 1k free plus a 4k expander board could be installed This meant that software had to include its own OS routines to handle device I O and interrupts as it is not possible to far call code across different memory banks In theory if Banks 5 14 were filled up to 1 MB of RAM could be installed but in practice the computer is limited to 256 KB as the PLA chip does not have enough address lines for it Passing data between different banks requires use of the register at 1 which selects the banks to be read from and written to via LDA zero page Y and STA zero page Y CPU opcodes The register at 0 selects the bank where the CPU fetches instructions from which will default to 15 F on power up The BASIC included with the CBM II series is known as BASIC 4 0 It contains the enhanced BASIC 4 0 disk commands as well as a few other added features for structured programming and error trapping Commodore had plans for a wide variety of RAM configurations as well as slimline and high profile models The slimline machines were all in one units while the high profile models had a separate keyboard and attached swivel mount monitor Both slimline and high profile models have a connector for internal floppy drives and coprocessor boards although only the latter have physical room in the case and a sufficient power supply for them No production machines had internal floppy drives however these likely would have been a half height variant of the 8050 Most of the planned CBM II models never made it past the prototype stage Originally there would be four models in each series with memory increasing in 64 KB increments 64k and 192k models were dropped early in development and no such models were produced In the end the only CBM II models to enter production and be sold to end users were the B128 600 B256 700 CBM 128 710 and PAL model P500s The B128 and P500 were slimline models with no internal disk drives or attached monitor while the CBM 128 and B256 were high profile models The B128 was the biggest selling of the three nbsp A Commodore CBM 610 the European version of a Commodore B128 nbsp Connectors on the back of a CBM 610reset RS 232C datasette cartridge 44 pin GND audio mains IEEE 488 power switch fuse nbsp Mainboard and power supply of a CBM 610The production naming within the United States and Canada was the B128 B256 and CBM128 80 CBM 256 80 while in Europe they were known as the 600 and 700 series respectively no B in front of the model number The P machine was known worldwide as the 500 series There are prototype models though such as the B500 earlier B128 design and B700 earlier CBM 128 80 CBM 256 80 design known to exist Model variants 5 Model RAM co processor610 128 KB620 256 KB630 256 KB co processor card710 128 KB720 256 KB730 256 KB co processor cardHistory editDue to the popularity of the C64 the P series was cancelled in the United States before it could be officially released however a few dealers who received preproduction units sold them As the P series had not then been certified by the FCC Commodore were threatened with legal action and were forced to recall them It was rumored that all recalled P series machines were destroyed however a handful of them are known to exist in private collections At least one model the P500 was commercially released in Europe but only sold in small numbers The most common of the B series was the low profile B128 1 called the CBM 610 in Europe which had 128 kilobytes of RAM The B128 did not sell well and ultimately Commodore s inventory was liquidated by Protecto Enterprizes a large Commodore mail order dealer based in Chicago Illinois 6 The Protecto ads for the B128 bundle including a dual disk drive monitor and printer appeared in various computer magazines for several years The CBM II line sold poorly and ended up being extremely expensive to manufacture as well as difficult to develop software for Commodore did not release any sales figures or an official discontinuation date however the B128 600 is the most common model in the lineup Production ended at some point during 1984 and Commodore liquidated their remaining inventory in 1985 CBM IIs were still being sold in Germany up to 1987 The exact number of CBM IIs produced is unclear however serial numbers indicate that at least 10 000 B128s were shipped along with a few dozen to a few thousand of the other models It is believed that Commodore produced at least 5000 6000 of each machine After discontinuing the CBM II range Commodore handed its documentation schematics and all other information over to CBUG the Chicago B128 Users Group Among these materials was a prototype motherboard using an Intel 8088 processor which hints at the possibility the line could have been made IBM compatible if production had continued citation needed CBUG went on to develop a library of software for the computers Its library however paled in comparison to the large software libraries enjoyed by the Commodore 64 and VIC 20 The rounded case design of the high profile CBM II series would later be used in redesigned versions of the original PET CBM computers such as the CBM8296 that the CBM II line was designed to replace In addition the memory banking scheme of the CBM II would be reused on the Commodore 128 with a few slight modifications References edit Commodore 256 The 8 bit that never was 21 July 2017 The Commodore CBM II Page Secret Weapons of Commodore The 6509s The P500 B128 256 B500 600 700 BX128 256 Commodore PET 200 at old computers com Archived 2010 11 21 at the Wayback Machine accessed 25 August 2014 Under the Hood of the CBM 610 2012 11 09 Retrieved 2016 04 28 Commodore B Series The Dusk of the Day Notes a Neither the CBM128 80 nor the B128 are to be confused with the very different and reasonably successful Commodore 128 also known as CBM 128 and C128 Commodore s final 8 bit home personal computer released in 1985 a The CBM II due to a quirk in the input if you do the command POKE 0 35 will lock everything and all of the memory will be filled with 00 s and FF s External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Commodore CBM II The Commodore CBM II page By Steve Gray The Commodore B series page at the Wayback Machine archived December 9 2006 By Edward Shockley Under the Hood of the Commodore P500 By Ullrich von Bassewitz The Commodore 500 600 and 700 Computers By David Viner Hires graphics board By Winfried Falkenhahn Michau s CBM II page By Michal Pleban Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Commodore CBM II amp oldid 1177909580, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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