On Apr 25, 2009, at 5:44 PM, Chuck Guzis wrote:
   I have some
schematics from the web, but they are extremely fuzzy and
 hard to read.  Can anyone help with theory of operation for an 820
 keyboard? I gather that it's a parallel data interface, but past that
 I'm a bit in the dark. 
 The 820 series is strongly related to the Jim Ferguson "Big Board"
 kits sold in the early 80's.  Bitsavers has both the schematics for
 the 820 and the Big Boards.
 The keyboard interface is as simple as it gets--8 bit postive logic
 ASCII character code and a negative-going strobe to reflect a
 keypress.  ISTR that BIg Board users tended to use George Risk
 keyboards, but just about every keyboard maker had a parallel ASCII
 model (e.g. Cherry, Keytronics, etc.).  Other than looking for bad
 connections or discrete components on your keyboard, there's not much
 to be done, as all of the "smarts" are usually located in a single
 mask-programmed keyboard interface chip.
 To see if your 820 mainboard is at fault, try driving the keyboard
 lines with the output of a PC's parallel port (not possible with a
 "real" computer like a Mac). 
 
   ...but possible in short spurts between crashes and viruses on a
PC. ;)
     [sorry, I couldn't resist!]
--
Dave McGuire
Port Charlotte, FL