Triumph-Adler was an old German company being fusion
of 2 metalworking companies. They made cars, motorbikes, sewing
machines, typewriters and mechanical calculators. In 1970s they even
made some computer systems. In late 70s and early 80s, they started,
with more or less good results, to sell microcomputers under Alphatronic
name (Like P1, P2... - the Alphatronic P-line was developed
independently, they were these "higher-case" Alphatronics). In 1983, TA
released Alphatronic PC, a 4MHz Z80-powered microcomputer with 64kB of
RAM, which could run in-ROM BASIC (being a home computer) or CP/M from
external 5.25" disk drive connected to system bus. Thus it was possible
to use it both as home and office computer. The Alphatronic PC brought
many changes to Triumph-Adler computers: First of all, it was made in
Japan to TA specification. To compete with office computers, it was
equipped with a full-size keyboard with numeric keypad. There was also a
tape recorder interface to make Alphatronic PC also good for home
computing where floppy drive was too expensive.
Unfortunately Alphatronic PCs were not chosen by many customers. The
biggest reason was that at first, TA tried to sell computers like
typewriters - under contracts with state agencies, offering an
unofficial pre-emptive right to purchase larger batches, which takes
time. When they finally decided to push it to shops with quick
advertising campaign, the Alphatronic was already obsolete. Later, more
problems appeared - poorly designed PCB required more work to make all
produced units running, which increased price. Specification assumed no
extended graphics, although with some programming it was possible to
achieve 160x72 mode and with more fiddling even 640x288, but in 4x4
blocks. For office computer, it had this standard 64kB of memory to run
CP/M, but poor extensibility made it not a good choice if more computers
had to be used - other machines could be e.g. connected in a serial port
network. Another problem was with software - the initial offer was a few
games and programs on ROM cartridges and a few on tapes, some games have
been licensed and ported. But not much more - so home users were left
with computer with almost no software and a slow Kansas City Standard
tape recorder. Office users got a bit better situation - there was a
CP/M and if they purchased an "Office suite" pack, they got a full word
processing package and TA printer.
The Export versions for western countries were branded "Royal". Some
last units have been sold by Matmos company under their brand. In 1986
the Triumph-Adler computer division was acquired by Olivetti.
Manufacturer | Triumph-Adler | |
Origin | Germany | |
Year of unit | 1983 | |
Year of introduction | 1983 | |
End of production | 1985? | |
CPU | Z80 | |
Speed | 4MHz | |
RAM | 64kB | |
ROM | 32kB | |
Colors: | 8 | |
Sound: | Built-in beeper | |
OS: | MS BASIC CP/M (with floppy disk drive) |
|
Display modes: | Text: 40x24, 80x24 Graphics: 80x72, 160x72 |
|
Media: | Tape, cartridge, floppy disk | |
Power supply: |
||
Built-in transformer power supply with switching +5V DC regulator |
||
I/O: | Serial port Parallel port Cartridge expansion System bus (for connecting floppy drive) Monochrome video output RGB output Tape I/O |
|
Possible upgrades: | ?? | |
Other peripherals in collection: -- none |
||
Software accessibility: | Rare (BASIC), Accessible (disk CP/M) |
My unit is probably from Germany, bought on
their "flea market". Unfortunately its condition was poor -
although it was looking nice on the outside, it was a total
disaster inside - it was definitely in some flood. PCB was
covered with thick dirt and components pins were rusty.
Fortunately, this rust was not coming from pins but transformer
casing nearby. The machine has been entirely, part by part, cleaned with brush and denatured alcohol. The crystallized flux on the keyboard PCB has been cleaned with acetone and keys have been "set to motion" with larger amounts of denatured alcohol. No electrolytic capacitors on mainboard were functional, and only a few on power supply board were OK. The biggest problem was with keyboard connector which needed lots of cleaning using solvent and later sandpaper. If the computer beeps and hangs, it may be its fault. |
However, the computer still didn't start. It gave a H-sync in about 1Hz frequency (variable, constantly changing) and nothing more, even no reaction on Shift-lock key. Although this suggests problem with H-sync generator which is a rare component, the MC6845 sync generator chip is software-programmable, so it points us to CPU which can't execute code enough to program video output in generator. After testing chips on system bus with TTL probe, the memory has been desoldered and 4 chips have been found faulty - after replacing the machine booted up and cleaning the keyboard more made it successfully run.
Contents: | Starting | Jumpers | Pinouts | Links |
It should blink screen, beep and run Microsoft BASIC
from ROM.
Loading and saving programs.
The computer has a KCS-type (Kansas City Standard) 300-baud tape
interface.
CLOAD "progrm"
Press Return and play the cassette. You can miss the last " - it'll load anyway. It'll show like:
SKIP TSTPRG
SKIP TSTPG2
FOUND PROGRM
OK
It skipped 2 not wanted programs. Program name must be
maximum 6 characters long.
Saving is made similar way:
CSAVE "PROGRM"
CLOAD ?
verifies the program in cassette against currently
loaded one.
There was a floppy disk drive for it, in fact two: F1 and F2. The F1 had
to be present if floppy disk was used as it contained controller while
F2 was just a disk drive.
There are 4 control things on mainboard:
1. DIP Switches:
Switches 1-3 control keyboard layout:
ON-ON-ON - International
OFF-ON-ON - German
ON-OFF-ON - USA
OFF-OFF-ON - French
ON-ON-OFF - British
OFF-ON-OFF - Italian
Switch 4 controls whether the data should be transmitted into Centronics
(ON) or serial (OFF) port when LPRINTing and printing from CP/M.
Switch 5 controls PAL (ON, 17.72MHz crystal) or NTSC (OFF, 14.318MHz
crystal) display standard.
Switch 6 is not used.
2. Jumper JP101
From left to right: 9600, 4800, 2400, 1200, 600, 300 baud for serial
port. By default it sits on 4800, second pins from the left.
3. Jumper JP103
Output level for cassette interface. Pins are numbered from left to
right, 1-4. By default, it's on 3-4 for 25mV. 1-2 is for 700mV.
4. Jumper JP102
Usually hard-wired to asynchronous, specifies asynchronous/synchronous
communication.
Video pinout - RGB (from schematic):
|
6 - R 7 - G 8 - B 2 - GND 4 - H-sync 5 - V-sync |
Cassette port pinout (from schematic):
|
4 - Tape OUT 5 - Tape IN 8,2 - GND 6,7 - Motor relay |
Mainboard power pinout:
Left->Right
GND +5V, +12V, -12V
http://web.archive.org/web/20120228163014/http://home.arcor.de/andreas.pernau/Computer/TA_Alphatronic_PC.htm
- Pinouts!
http://www.retroarchive.org/hardware/Royal/index.html - Software and
manual
http://bitsavers.org/bits/Alphatronic/CPM/ - CP/M disks
ftp://ftp.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de/pub/cm/alphatronic/ - A larger
archive of documentation
https://www.1000bit.it/lista/t/ta/alphatronicpc_ad2.jpg -
Advertisement in Italian.
http://oldcomputers.dyndns.org/public/pub/rechner/ta/Triumpf_Adler_Alphatronic_PC-8/manual/
- More docs
http://81.105.120.101/alphatronic/ - Technical Reference Manual with
schematic diagrams, poor quality but they are here. ICs are numbered on
PCB like IC1008, then look for IC with small number "08" on it - this
will be that IC.