Heathkit H8 vs. H-89

From: Christian Fandt <cfandt_at_netsync.net>
Date: Thu Oct 8 08:04:52 1998

At 23:20 10/07/98 -0400, Allison wrote:
>< Does anybody know if the H8 and H-89 were software compatible? I know
>< CP/M was available for the H-89 (as well as HDOS), but I've only heard
>< rumors of an H-8 CP/M -- maybe they're the same?
>
>They were somewhat software compatable in that the both ran 8080 based
>software. The H89 was z80, the H8 was 8080, they had differenet IO port
>and memory maps. Both had different disk formats.
>
>CPM for both could be the same in the sense that the CCP and BDOS were
>always the same... The bios however was likely very different as that
>is the part that interacts with the IO and disks.

Oh gosh, it's been a long time but the software was (for the most part!)
compatible. I'm going back 9 or 10 years now since I last really hit the
keyboards of my H8/H19 and H/Z89 machines. Third-party s/w could have had
Z80-specific code written-in at the expense of some of the older 8080-based
H8 machines of the time which were not yet upgraded to Z80. Usually, it
seems though, everybody wrote assembler code so that either the s/w checked
to see which processor was used or wrote straight 8080 asm code to just
cover everybody without having the extra CPU checking code taking up space.
Most commercial language interpreters and compilers, especially from Heath,
handled 8080-based machines for sure.

Allison, for the H8 there were at least two third-party Z80 CPU boards made
(I can look up the mfgrs if anybody wants) and a Heath-made Z80 board.
Early on when the Z80 became rather popular, the original 8080 CPU board
was of course found to be lacking in performance compared to the TRS-80's,
N*, Kaypros, various S100's and other contemporary CP/M Z80 machines.
Hence, the little cottage industry, so to speak, which sprang up to deal
with making Z80 boards. A 4 MHz CPU by DG Micro (I think that's the name)
really was a performer up against many other machines. The H-89 was a Z80
machine when it first was introduced around 1980 or thereabouts.

Anybody recall Trionyx Electronics who were in Southern California? The
fellow who ran it was an ambitious sort when it came to making H8 accessory
boards and a Z80 CPU board.

I've got a significant stash of H8, H/Z-89/90 and H/Z-100 paper stored away
in boxes plus the hardware to go with it. I've got a bunch of H-11 stuff
too although I just got the equipment and paper in the past year and don't
know much about it yet.

I can look up H8/H89/H100/H11 info if anybody needs it and if they can wait
'till I can dig through a mountain of boxes and equipment (I just moved
much of the collection from the old house. It's a mess! Just ask Hans and
his wife who were visiting us several weeks ago. Even more was stuffed into
this house since they were here.)

Regards, Chris
-- --
Christian Fandt, Electronic/Electrical Historian
Jamestown, NY USA
Member of Antique Wireless Association
        URL: http://www.ggw.org/freenet/a/awa/
Received on Thu Oct 08 1998 - 08:04:52 BST

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.3.0 : Fri Oct 10 2014 - 23:31:25 BST