Difference between revisions of "Schneiderware Basisplatine"

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The plain PCB, or the fully assembled board were available via mail-order. Unlike as for the other DIY projects of the Schneiderware series, the PCB layout has not been printed (in paper-form) in the magazine (though the magazine offered to send them to interested persons). Another solution would have been to buy a standard ECB backplane (like [[:File:Reichelt Euro-Bus-Karte.jpg|this]]), and to build an adaptor for the CPC expansion port by hand.
 
The plain PCB, or the fully assembled board were available via mail-order. Unlike as for the other DIY projects of the Schneiderware series, the PCB layout has not been printed (in paper-form) in the magazine (though the magazine offered to send them to interested persons). Another solution would have been to buy a standard ECB backplane (like [[:File:Reichelt Euro-Bus-Karte.jpg|this]]), and to build an adaptor for the CPC expansion port by hand.
 
* [[Schneiderware Basisplatine|Schneiderware #2a Basisplatine (Motherboard)]] (7/1986 pages 60-67)
 
 
  
 
== Pictures ==
 
== Pictures ==
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* [[Media:Schneiderware 2 - Backplane and Centronics.pdf|Schneiderware 2 - Backplane and Centronics.pdf]] - Basisplatine and Printer Port - '''7/1986 page 60-67''', plus complaints from 10/1986 page 10, port B redefined on 12/1986 page 124 and 3/1987 page 8-9, final notes from 11/1987 page 98
 
* [[Media:Schneiderware 2 - Backplane and Centronics.pdf|Schneiderware 2 - Backplane and Centronics.pdf]] - Basisplatine and Printer Port - '''7/1986 page 60-67''', plus complaints from 10/1986 page 10, port B redefined on 12/1986 page 124 and 3/1987 page 8-9, final notes from 11/1987 page 98
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== References ==
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* [[ECB Bus]]

Revision as of 11:53, 2 October 2010

The Schneiderware Basisplatine (backplane) is some kind of a ECB Bus motherboard for the Schneiderware DIY series, which was published by german magazine CPC Schneider International. The board has five 64-pin ECB sockets (for use with the DIY boards of the series), a 50-pin connector (for the CPC expansion port), and 7 soldering points (for an optional power supply, like the Schneiderware Power Supply).

The plain PCB, or the fully assembled board were available via mail-order. Unlike as for the other DIY projects of the Schneiderware series, the PCB layout has not been printed (in paper-form) in the magazine (though the magazine offered to send them to interested persons). Another solution would have been to buy a standard ECB backplane (like this), and to build an adaptor for the CPC expansion port by hand.

Pictures

Scanned Article

References