Front Panel Theory

From: Chuck McManis <cmcmanis_at_freegate.com>
Date: Wed Nov 25 21:36:50 1998

Not trying to be a snob here, but true "Front Panel Theory" can only be
practiced on a computer where the 'innards' are exposed. Most
microprocessors are too integrated to support a "real" front panel. This is
one of the reason they died out fairly quickly in the micro world but lived
for quite a while in the mini-world.

Basically an ideal front panel contains enough switches to set any memory
address, load any register, and start, stop, and single step the CPU, and
enough lights to monitor both system state and the current address. Many
older panels let you look at several things simultaneously but later ones
like the PDP-11 and PDP-8 panels used selector switches to multiplex the
lights and reduce cost.

--Chuck

At 06:03 PM 11/25/98 -0600, you wrote:
>This might be a bit of an odd question, but can anyone point me in the
>right direction to find info on theory of operation of a front panel? I
>have a z80 based computer which I built a few years ago (wire-wrapped)
>which uses an eprom for program storage. I would like to add a front
>panel (switches and lights) to it to get better aquainted with the old way
>of doing things. Unfortunatly, my knowledge of microprocessor-based
>systems post-dates the era of front panels. The eventual goal is to build
>a hands-on display to show how systems were bootstrapped. (without
>letting people abuse a 'priceless' altair or imsai)
>
>Thanks,
>srw
>
>
Received on Wed Nov 25 1998 - 21:36:50 GMT

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.3.0 : Fri Oct 10 2014 - 23:31:20 BST