05-08-2020, 01:37 PM
Hi Elpiggio!
Someone's built discrete hardware, FPGA and emulated systems.
The decision of what type to build depends upon your planned journey towards the planned goal.
Building a real floppy disk controller using just an FPGA is a challenge with the most difficult portion being the data separator circuit.
Building from discrete hardware is the best learning experience because the machine can be built gradually from just a Z80 flashing a LED to a fully fledged disk system microbee.
After building a hardware machine, building and FPGA version is the similar but in a virtual environment.
And then there's the emulator/simulator option where you get foreign hardware to emulate the microbee hardware behaviour.
The DGZ80 from which the microbee is derived is an overly complex method of building a microbee. Being an S-100 board it has the additional complexity for the S-100 Bus interface which requires 8080 hardware signal emulation.
A hybrid solution is also viable and I think that's what Ewan's done with his upcoming kit. i.e. Discrete hardware with an FPGA. However this hybrid approach is more complex with many more factors to address.
If you have an EPROM Emulator and EPROM Burner and oscilloscope - build it from discrete hardware.
If you need any help, just holler.
Cheers
Someone
Someone's built discrete hardware, FPGA and emulated systems.
The decision of what type to build depends upon your planned journey towards the planned goal.
Building a real floppy disk controller using just an FPGA is a challenge with the most difficult portion being the data separator circuit.
Building from discrete hardware is the best learning experience because the machine can be built gradually from just a Z80 flashing a LED to a fully fledged disk system microbee.
After building a hardware machine, building and FPGA version is the similar but in a virtual environment.
And then there's the emulator/simulator option where you get foreign hardware to emulate the microbee hardware behaviour.
The DGZ80 from which the microbee is derived is an overly complex method of building a microbee. Being an S-100 board it has the additional complexity for the S-100 Bus interface which requires 8080 hardware signal emulation.
A hybrid solution is also viable and I think that's what Ewan's done with his upcoming kit. i.e. Discrete hardware with an FPGA. However this hybrid approach is more complex with many more factors to address.
If you have an EPROM Emulator and EPROM Burner and oscilloscope - build it from discrete hardware.
If you need any help, just holler.
Cheers
Someone
