The keyboard encoder in the Heath H-19 terminals (also the Zenith Z-19) was a National
Semiconductor part. It was discontinued in late 1981 or 82, while the terminal was still
in production. Heath bought tens of thousands of them in a "last time buy" both
for ongoing production and for future service. I don't know the current availability
of this item from Heath (Heath does still exist, and does sell SOME parts), but it
hasn't been available from National for a decade and a half. It WAS a generic part at
the time. Note that every H/Z - 89/90 has an imbedded H/Z-19 terminal and therefore uses
this part.
I'm not sure of this, but I think that the ROM was required because the encoder only
generated a "key number" and not ASCII, and it wasn't easily possible to
arrange the keys for the key number to correspond to the ASCII value (Carl Goy was the
designer, and he's still around out in California somewhere, he worked for Mouse
Systems and Headland Technology after leaving Heath).
I know all of this because for 5 years I was the Product Line Director for the entire
Heath/Zenith computer line.
Barry Watzman