C't 512 KB internal RAM expansion
Upgrade of the CPC 6128's internal RAM to 512 KiB as proposed in the article Aus David wird Goliath: 512 KB RAM für Schneider CPC in issue 10/1987, pages 156 to 162 of the German IT magazine c't. The DIY project name is CPC 6512. The mod requires to remove (or disable) the sixteen RAM chips on the CPC6128 mainboard, and to replace them by bigger chips, plus whatever additional bank selection logic.
One issue later, c't 11/1987, the magazine published a driver which creates a RAM disk within the additional memory. This RAM disk can be used in AMSDOS.
Contents
Technical
The memory is accessed via Port 7Fxxh, as on Standard Memory Expansions. Since the internal RAM is removed, its total capacity is only 512K (unlike standard 512K expansions which provide 64K internal plus 512K external memory, ie. 576K total). Altogether, the c't expansion works like a 448K dk'tronics expansion (leaving the banks selected via OUT [7Fxxh],FCh..FFh unused).
One half (256K) of the total (512K) expansion memory can be accessed as Video RAM (with normal expansions, only 64 KB are accessible as VRAM). This is making the expansion slightly incompatible with the dk'tronics standard. However, usually expansion memory is mapped to 4000h-7FFFh, whilst VRAM is usually mapped to C000h-FFFFh. So, most existing software may work with it, without accidently displaying garbage on the screen.
Missing Info
- Unknown which banks are usable as VRAM
- The first four 16K bank are (probably) usuable as VRAM (as on all 64K CPC models)
- The next four 16K bank are (hopefully) not usuable as VRAM (for CP/M+ compatibility, which uses them as Work RAM)
- For further banks it's totally unknown if they are used as VRAM or not
- Unknown if it's fully dk'tronics compatible, or more like incompletely implemented Inicron variant
- Unknown what happens on accessing the unused region via OUT [7Fxxh],FCh..FFh
- Chipset / Schematic is unknown
Scanned Article / Schematics
Offtopic
The CPC 6512 c't Memory Expansion is not to be confused with issues CPC 6512 and CPC 6513 of the more popular World War II Fanzine from Concord Publications Company.
Related hardware modifications
- Bank Swapper by Khany/Cherry-T (less complex: bank-exchanging toggle, no memory expansion; 1993)
- CPC4MB memory upgrade by Yarek (more advanced; 2005/2006)