In early 1980s computers became popular not only as
work tools or scientific machines, but as toys to play games. Consoles
with built-in or cartridge games were around since late 70s. The idea of
"home computer" - computer with keyboard and programming language, but
also capable of displaying graphics and animation needed for games,
started to be implemented in many computers.
Mattel Electronics, a video game division of Mattel toy company, got its
most success from video consoles like Intellivision. It was designed by
British company Radofin and manufactured in Hong Kong. When Mattel
decided to step into home computers business, a simple way of getting a
computer was getting it from Radofin.
In early 1980s, Radofin already had 2 designs of microcomputers. Simple
one, internally codenamed "Checkers" and advanced model (codename
"Chess"). The first has been released in 1983 as Aquarius and the plan
was to release the second as Aquarius II.
The first Aquarius machines were sold below manufacturing price. The
gain was in its peripherals and cartridges, which had games, memory
expansions, ports, joypads or 300-baud modem. Even a CP/M emulator
cartridge has been announced. Unfortunately, 4kB of RAM was too small
for any serious work except learning BASIC, which occupied most of RAM
already. The BASIC was also limited (however only very first units have
BASIC without FOR instruction) and peripherals releases became more and
more delayed. Maybe because they ordered porting CP/M to the company
which designed power supply units? Graphics was not programmable easily.
Finally Mattel passed all computer busines to Radofin 4 months after
releasing Aquarius. Radofin made it for few years trying to sell it here
and there under different brands, but never made a big success.
Right before ending microcomputer business, a small number of Aquarius
II computers have been released (by Radofin), but it was not machine
previously known as "Chess". It was an extended Aquarius I. The only
differences were casing, full-stroke keyboard and extended BASIC in
ROM... still using 4kB of on-board RAM made a 20kB RAM cartridge a
must-have. The "Aquarius III", real "Chess" machine has never been
released.
This is the first Aquarius model released shortly after Mattel passed it
to Radofin, probably for German market. It has a Z80 running at 3.5MHz,
4kB of RAM and built-in TV modulator. Its small keyboard is not very
comfortable but usable, and graphics capabilities are, for that time,
below average (80x72 in 16 colors). Although most games were released on
cartridges, it has tape recorder connector.
Manufacturer | Radofin / Mattel | |
Origin | UK | |
Year of unit | 1983 | |
Year of introduction | 1983 | |
End of production | 1987? | |
CPU | Z80 | |
Speed | 3.5MHz | |
RAM | 4kB (cartridge expansion possible) |
|
ROM | 8kB | |
Colors: | 16 | |
Sound: | 1-voice | |
OS: | BASIC, machine-code games on cartridges |
|
Display modes: | 80x72 16colors graphics 320x192 graphics 24x40 Text mode |
|
Media: | Cartridges, tape | |
Power supply: External on permanently fixed cable. UNREGULATED: Small warning: Original power supply's transformer is quite "soft" and has even +/- 24V when not loaded. |
||
I/O: | System bus / Cartridge
connector RF output Tape I/O Serial printer |
|
Possible upgrades: | Possible by cartridge expanders | |
Accessories in collection: |
||
Software accessibility: | Fair (TOSEC) |
My unit is in a good condition, it was sold for German market as it has German manuals, yet in its box there are markings in French and English too. Probably it's Mattel unit re-branded back to Radofin, as most components are from 1983 and there is still "MATTEL ELECTRONICS" visible in plastic on the bottom and under the cartridge connector cover.
Important notes about hardware:
- Most I/O ports are connected right to chips pins WITHOUT ANY PROTECTION.
Pay attention to peripherals.
- Power supply unit is only a transformer, rectifier and set of
capacitors. Output voltage without any load is usually +/-24V on 12V
lines and +12V on 5V line. This voltage is regulated inside computer.
- Power pinout on mainboard:
____
_______
| /\ /
\
RF | \/ \______/
| ____
| O 1234
__|_______________ <-mainboard edge
1 - +12V 150mA (unregulated)
2 - GND
3 - +5V 1,2A (unregulated)
4 - -12V 10mA (unregulated)
Contents: | Starting | Recording media | Pinouts | Links |
The machine starts and offers option to boot to BASIC by displaying "BASIC Press RETURN key to start" on slowly blinking screen. If you press Return then, it'll start MS BASIC from 1982.
To save your current program on tape, use CSAVE (CTRL-A) and program name in quotes:
CSAVE "MYPROG"
Program names can be 6 characters max. Then you press
Record on tape deck and Return on Aquarius.
Verifying saved program is with CLOAD? command.
To load program, use CLOAD (CTRL-Z) followed by program name in quotes:
CLOAD "MYPROG"
or just empty CLOAD to load first program it encounters. It should respond like "FOUND "MYPROG"" and load. If you type the program name and other program will be encountered on tape, its name will be shown and loading it will be skipped.
Generally there are two formats: BIN, which are direct
binary dumps of ROMs used in cartridges and CAQ, cassette dump format.
CAQ can be used in emulator like
Virtual Aquarius or
converted to WAV by CAQ2WAV tool available in Virtual Aquarius package.
Another emulator is AqEmu, also made in early 2000s.
Tape:
|
1 - Output (to recorder) 2 - GND 3 - Input (from recorder) |
Serial printer:
|
1 - GND 2 - DSR? 3 - TxD |
1200baud, 8-bit, no parity, 1 stop bit, hardware handshaking
(DTR/DSR).
RS232-levels compatible, not TTL. Yes, you can
LPRINT
to a PC terminal.
http://www.reocities.com/emucompboy/ - Virtual Aquarius emulator,
along with CAQ games and tool (CAQ2WAV) to play them back.
https://archive.org/details/Mattel_Aquarious_TOSEC_2012_04_23 -
Mattel Aquarius TOSEC software supplied by Archive.org. Mostly binary
cartridge dumps, some CAQs.
http://www.digitpress.com/faq/aquarius.htm - Mattel Aquarius FAQ.
http://www.vdsteenoven.com/aquarius/ - In collection.
http://www.vdsteenoven.com/aquarius/techinfo.html - Very good
technical page.
http://oldcomputers.net/aquarius.html - Another collector's
description.
http://computermuseum.50megs.com/brands/aquarius.htm - Nice history
description
http://www.notanon.com/tag/mattel-aquarius/ - Composite video output
by use of MAX4090 chip
http://bhabbott.net.nz/micro_expander.html - Aquarius modern
expander.