One of the full-width cards is something like
'area fill'. So it does that in hardware too?
Yes, probably, it is not that big trick (in theory). Example Amiga's custom chipsets
was capable for area fill (line mode), and btw, prototype of that custom chip set was made
from TTL
Please send some photos of that Sigma's miracle!
- Johannes ThelenFinland
Before microcomputers blog (Finnish)
From: ard at p850ug1.demon.co.uk
To: cctalk at
classiccmp.org
Subject: Sigma Electronics Systems Display Generator 5564
Date: Thu, 5 Mar 2015 18:34:30 +0000
Can anyone tell me anything about the subject: line? It seems to be a high-end graphics
terminal from the
mid 1970s. I have found the electronics unit while unpacking here, I think I have the
keyboard (with a little
built-in joystick?) somewhere too. I don't have the monitor, but I am guessing
it's TV rates.
Pysically it's just a metal box (about the size of a 4U rack unit without flanges).
There is nothing on the front
panel. The back panel has the on/off switch and connectors for a keyboard (DA15),
'Digital Video' (ditto),
Host and Downstream RS232 ports (DB25, of course) Host and Dowstream current loop ports
(DE9), 3 video
outputs (BNC, I assume these can be used as R,G,B), mix video output (ditto) and video
input (my guess is that
the terminal video can be overlayed on some other video signal, again a BNC).
The top cover comes off with 2 screws. It reveals very little apart from a massive linear
PSU. The interesting
stuff is exposed by removing the front panel (4 screws) which gives access to the card
cage. There are 2
columns of half-width cards at the top, then about 7 full width ones. 2 of the half-width
cards are wire-wrapped
not PCBs. I forget what they do, one of them seems to be the video timing/sync counters.
On other half-width
cards are the processor (6800), ROMs (lots of EPROMs),Comms, video output (resistor DACs,
etc) and
a 'vector generator' which I guess is to draw lines, it's just a lot of of
logic ICs, no microprocessor.
One of the full-width cards is something like 'area fill'. So it does that in
hardware too? The others -- and there
are half a dozen of them -- are 'Pixel Store'. Each has 16K*16 of DRAM and a 16
bit ALU (4 off 74181).
I hate to think how much this cost when new. RAM and ALUs were not cheap!
-tony