On 4/25/17, 7:52 PM, "cctalk on behalf of Jim Brain via cctalk"
<cctalk-bounces at
classiccmp.org on behalf of cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
On 4/25/2017 9:47 PM, Peter Cetinski wrote:
The 16B released around 1984 is essentially a
factory upgraded Model 12
with the card cage and the 6Mhz MC68000 subsystem consisting of a CPU
card and 1 or more 16 bit memory cards. The 16B for a time was the best
selling Unix workstation in the world.
So, the 16B has the KB conn on the machine,
but the KB?
And, the 16B has the Z80 motherboard, witht eh 68K in the cage?
The 6000 released in 1985 was a slightly enhanced 16B with the biggest
difference being the upgrade to an 8Mhz MC68000. This system allowed
you to run XENIX 3.x and address up to 1MB of RAM.
I thought the 16B could also do
1MB of RAM?
Can the 6000 still run the Z80 Oses (like TRSDOS II and such)? (I
assume so, since you noted that all units of this entire line used a Z80
for IO)
Jim
Also it was possible to pull the 64k chips from the ram board and put 256k
chips in, it required new PALs on the ram board at least, and possibly a
wire run for the extra address line. Nanook at eskimo north used to run
on 16?s and 6000?s and used to upgrade the ram boards.