Z80 Mark 2

Giving the Z80 a good boot

Last updated: 15 Aug 2009 - 15:31

Booting computers is an age old problem. It seems like an easy task to you, just press the button, but the software and hardware involved is often a bit of a hack. When you start a Z80 processor (ignoring reset hold times and clock stability for the moment) it will try to load an instruction from memory address 0, execute it then move on. So the traditional way Z80 micro computers (like the Sinclair ZX Spectrum and the Amstrad NC100, to name a couple I own) are built is with a ROM chip at the bottom of the address space with some kind of operating system on it, e.g. a BASIC interpreter. This is cheap and simple, but has some big problems for the hobbyist or developer.

Section:
Z80 Project
Tags:
Z80,
retro-puting,
Z80 Mark 2,
PIC

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