On 08/25/2011 10:01 AM, Jason McBrien wrote:
My dad ran his own business and was a total
calculator geek.
...
He also had an incredibly cool Sharp plotting
calculator that I'm lucky
enough to still have. Damn hard to find new pens for it, though.
Oh wow, that one sounds like fun! What model is it?
I have an Shapr PC1500 which meets this description. The machine is a
reasonalbe pocket computer, it fits into a cradle containing a cassette
interace and one of those Alps 4-pen plottre mechanisms. Unfortunately,
as wityh many such plotters, the motor pinion gears have split with time,
so it's not useable at the momnet, I should have a go at cutting soem
replacements...
I also have the RS232 interface for it. Actaully, thete were 2 versions
of this. The Sharp one (CE158 IIRC) had both am RS232 and a Centronics
interfce. The Radio Shack one (sold for their PC2 machine) only has the
RS232 inteerface, the buffer bord (a couple of '04s IIRC) and the
conenctor for the Centronics interface are not fitted. The ROM is the
same, the commands ot access the Cnetronics interface are there but not
documented IIRC>
Anyway, I have one of each type. In the spare space in the Radio Shack
one I fitted a bit of stripboard containing an ADC0804 ADC chip and a
4-channel analoguemux wired to a DA15 socket, and conencted to the pins
on the I/O controller chip that would have been used for the Centronics
interface. The result is a combined 8-bit 4 channel ADC and RS232
interface.
-tony