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APOLLO181 HOMEMADE TTL CPU

APOLLO181 is a homemade didactic CPU made of bipolar logics and memories, characteristic of the TTL Bugbook® era in 1970s

 

Enjoy the project at

ygg-it.tripod.com/

 

 

Technology:

TTL Schottky (1974 Bugbook® era technology)

 

Data word size:

4-bit

 

Instruction word size:

8-bit

 

On-board RAM:

256 byte

 

On-board ROM:

64x16 bit

 

ALU type:

74181

 

Number of basic instructions:

16

 

Addressable memory locations:

256

 

Clock frequency:

2,5 MHz single phase

 

Clock cycles per instruction:

4

 

Interrupt levels (max):

256 without RTI

 

Number of internal registers:

16

 

Number of I/O ports (max):

16

 

Number of integrated circuit:

59

 

Board size:

300 x 300 mm (11,8 x 11,8 in.)

 

On board Power Supply (V/I)

5V/ 3500 mA (40VA transformer)

 

APOLLO181 has been conceived and assembled in Italy in 2012 by Gianluca G. (author of the homemade Z80/AM95 microcomputer) using early 1970s TTL technology. Designed and tested with the aid of a hardware simulator, APOLLO181 is running today at 2.5 MHz on a 12x12 inches single perfboard.

 

APOLLO181 is a multi-chip board and its peculiarity is that all the employed TTL components were described in the Bugbook® I & II (LOGIC & MEMORY EXPERIMENTS USING TTL INTEGRATED CIRCUITS, written by Dr. Peter R. Rony © 1974, 1st edition), as a Gianluca G.'s personal tribute to these books. By happy coincidence we are also approaching the 40 years Bugbook® publication anniversary.

 

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Uploaded on May 19, 2012
Taken on May 11, 2012