Leading towards the space age
(photo from the early 90's)

Homebrewing your own Vintage XT Computer

Last update 9/6/2011

Preface

If you are reading this page you will be more likely fascinated about vintage computers. If you have some experience in building electronics projects then you may have thought that building a computer is not possible, it is just too complicated. But why do you think building your own computer from scratch is an impossible process, so that you just forget it? I am not talking about buying cards or parts and join them together, everyone does this more or less. I am talking about building such a computer hardware really from scratch. Buying the components (chips, resistors etc.), print the PCBs, program the BIOSes and join everything together. At first look it seems almost an impossible task! Well it's not so easy actually. Even the oldest computers are much more complex machines than the various electronic kits projects that are sold for the hobbyists today. But it is not impossible. With much patience and some electronic skills you can build your own PC-XT computer hardware. This page is intended to do most of the work for you and make you able to reproduce the hardware.

 

Where to start and why PC/XT

First of all, you have to decide about the requirements of the system. What do you want to do with it? You want it just for fun or do you plan to do something else with it? You will probably find that you will do it for fun, to impress your friends or for the memory of the good old days. Then you can start thinking about each part of the system. To save pain and cost, you are advised to find the simplest solution available, without compromising the abilities of the system. Also, can you find all the parts for the system or are they obsolete?  Then you can proceed to the construction. This was actually all the brainstorming that I did before deciding which way should I follow.

Why not to build an older computer than the IBM PC?

As far as I have read on internet websites, since the early 70's there were great attempts for homebrew personal computers like Mark-8 and Altair machines which eventually, in a decade, lead to the IBM PC. Some of them used their own custom CPU made from discrete logic and today there are some very thoughtful guys that have made their own computers based on their own CPU designs. A real evolution! I wasn't even born back then and even if I had been born, I would probably not have an idea of what a computer would mean, in a country like Greece. I decided not to reproduce such an old machine but rather go for a newer computer. There were two main reasons for my decision:

Why not to build a newer computer than the IBM PC?

I decided to build the PC/XT because of various reasons. First of all for fun! Also, I needed a computer of that era, that would be able to run all my DOS programs. Then it needed to be hardware compatible with the ISA bus in order to be able to accept all the standard ISA cards. The 8-bit ISA bus of the PC/XT is more simple to build and control than the 16-bit ISA bus (and the PCI of course). Finally it is made of standard component packages (not SMD), so it can be easily reproduced. Another important consideration is that PC/XT like many older computers are built in double-sided PCB boards. They do not use the multi-layers PCBs that computers today use, so their PCBs are easy and cheap to build by an electronics lab or by yourself!

There are two computers of this era of interest, the PC, which was the first IBM personal computer and the XT, which was it's successor. I have chosen to build the XT because of it's better performance and because it has 8 ISA slots at the same complexity as the PC. After judging all the considerations above, I decided that the XT could be the simplest computer for the homebrewer to build, and at the same time still useable today if you are really open minded about computers and software.

 

How this can be done

If you are an advanced computer hardware engineer and you have lots of time, you may start designing your own PC-XT computer. Personally I do not, so another solution has to be found. A good start is to find some old issues of electronics and computer magazines. They sometimes publish complete projects of computer hardware. I have found some of them that present various cards projects but none of them has a PC-XT motherboard project. If you find some complete projects, give them a try. But if you cannot, then do not be disappointed, as there is another solution.

This solution is the way I prefer, the reverse engineering. It needs a lot of patience but the result is guaranteed. Instead of designing your own hardware why not make a clone of a commercial product? Many companies did clone the IBM PC back then. As I said earlier, find the simplest solution available. Of course there are no schematics and PCB patterns available so in my case I obtained old PC-XT clone boards and performed some reverse engineering to them. I chosen among several boards to find the most minimal, with the less and easier to find components on it, in order to be easier to reproduce it. The procedure to make a clone of every PCB in the computer can me summarized in the next steps:

It is a painful process that needs a lot of patience, but hey! If you do it once for a board, won't need to do it again, plus if you make your PCB patterns available on the net, then you can help many others save huge lot of time.

 

 

Building the PC-XT computer

Ok, PC-XTs are old machines, so you cannot do what you want to do in the same way you do it with new computers. But you probably already know this. Nevertheless, you can make some decisions that will boost up the performance and the usability of these old computers. The X-DOS is a nice software project that I develop, suitable to make the most out of your vintage computer, so let's talk about the hardware.

 

Main board

Sergey's XT is an IBM PC/XT compatible processor board with some IBM AT and IBM PS/2 features. The board has the ISA card form factor, and designed to be plugged in to an ISA back plane. This allows greater flexibility of the final system size. The board is also easier to assemble than the original IBM PC (if you've got basic soldering skills) and it uses only thru-hole components. Most of the components used in this board are readily available from various electronic components distributors, some components can be borrowed from old motherboards. The goal is to have an open source implementation, including schematics, PCB, BIOS and related software. I have ordered a board from Sergey to test it, but until I have some results you can download his whole project in a single zip package in this link.

 

Solid state disk

The completed SSD

Most of these computers do not accept hard disks but they use only floppy disks to load the OS and programs into RAM. Some of them, like the XT, used very old hard disks that are obsolete and cannot build by the homebrewer. Floppy disk drives are very slow and sensitive to mechanical interference, dust and magnetic fields. Unfortunately, the floppy is the most commonly used and all of our old programs are in floppies. Thus, you have to use floppy drives, but for the OS (which is probably most of the time used) there is a better solution which greatly boosts up speed, the solid state floppy disk. I have found this project on an old issue of Elektor magazine. It is an 8-bit ISA bus card and it is very similar to the so called RAM page cards, but this has an onboard battery to keep the data into RAM and a BIOS to emulate the floppy drive so you can boot DOS from it. It even has a write protect switch to keep your OS safe in it and a LED to show the loading state. I was very lucky to find the original BIOS program for it. Because the article is in Greek, if you decide to build this and you need more info about how to format and boot it please email me on http://www.microwave.gr/giannopk. I am writing the basic installation information below for your convenience. This has been copied from the magazine and I found it to cause some problems, so after this description I am giving you another way of install the SSD.

In order to install the SSD into DOS you have to do the following:
First, connect the right address jumpers (A3, A4) to set the address of the card. The address without jumpers is 318H.
Then, you have to let the OS know that an SSD has been installed. You have to write the disk information into the CONFIG.SYS. To do this, type drivparm=/D:00/F:07/H:2/S:xx/T80 to install it as a drive A or drivparm=/D:01/F:07/H:2/S:xx/T80 to install it as a drive B. Where "xx" you have to type the number 18 for 1.44Mb disc emulation or 36 for 2.88Mb disc emulation.
If your computer has already A and B drive you have to start a DOS driver. Just add the next line into CONFIG.SYS. Device=\<DOS directory>\driver.sys/D:nr/F:07/H:2/S:xx/T:80
This can get values from 0 to 3.
The next thing to do is to format the SSD using the /F parameter of the format command. Type FORMAT A:F: 1440 for 1.44MB on drive A, FORMAT A:F: 2880 for 2.88MB on drive A, FORMAT B:F: 1440 for 1.44MB on drive B or FORMAT B:F: 2880 for 2.88MB on drive B. Note in these commands you have to add the /S parameter, to make the disk bootable.

I have managed to install the drive as drive B but I have not yet managed to make it bootable, so right now I boot from a floppy and then set the system to read the OS from the SSD by assigning drive A to be equal to B, so the floppy is no more needed. Maybe it is something with my CONFIG.SYS or a conflict with the floppy disc controller, I have to figure it out but if you can provide some feedback it will be greatly accepted. I should expect the SSD to boot the OS without the need of the boot floppy because it has an onboard bios. Here is all you need to build the disc.

Now I provide you with another way of installing the SSD. Just download floppydos.zip and read the instructions in the README.TXT file.

BIOS (HEX) Email me to get it. Provided as is for educational purposes only. Copyright protected.
BIOS (BIN) Email me to get it. Provided as is for educational purposes only. Copyright protected.
Elektor magazine article in Greek
Elektor magazine article in English part 1 and part 2
Elektor kit codes
Pricelist
PCB upper layer
PCB lower layer
Components placement
Components list Warning! There is an error in the components list. The pull-up resistor network R1 must be 10K and NOT 10 ohms.
Schematic

Update! Please read the English magazine articles part1 and part 2 before you try anything, as they contain the complete jumper configuration table.
To make a bootable SSD I did the following process (this is not mentioned in the article), it may be different depended on your motherboard:

1. Set the motherboard settings to allow for 4 installed drives
2. Boot dos from floppydos floppy
3. Edit config.sys on floppy with drivparm command (not driveparm as mentioned in the article but drivparm !)
4. Reboot PC from floppy
5. Format the SSD with format d: /s /f:1440
6. Then copy all files and folders from floppy to SSD
7. Edit config.sys on the SSD with the drivparm for the SSD as it was drive A (maybe this is not necessary)
8. Shut down the PC
9. Set the solid state floppy as drive A, setting jumpers 1 and 2 on it, in order to boot from it (old PCs boot only from drive A).
10. Shut down onboard bios on the floppy controller (if it has any)
11. Boot the PC. It should boot from the SSD as drive A

Darren Lue Choy has produced some very nice artwork in the two compressed files below, including some changes in the original board.

Attached in 2010_07_09_SSD_reference.zip are the processed reference images in PNG and SVG format. Images were processed using Inkscape (Potrace), Notepad++ and Excell.

Attached in 2010_07_09_SSD_clone.zip is the resulting clone design in Eagle, PDF and PNG format. Clone was drawn using Eagle 5.
 
 

Floppy disk controller

To load your own programs into RAM you need floppy drives. The floppy controller that I will try to replicate has it's own onboard BIOS and it does not need drivers. It can also support all types of floppy drives, 360Kb, 720Kb, 1.2Mb, 1.44Mb. It is the PII-151B controller from DTK COMPUTER, INC.

Settings and layout
BIOS (HEX) Email me to get it. Provided as is for educational purposes only. Copyright protected.
BIOS (BIN) Email me to get it. Provided as is for educational purposes only. Copyright protected.
Information

Under Construction

 

Floppy disk drives

I wanted to have both 5+1/4 inch and 3+1/2 inch floppy drives because my old programs were in 5+1/4 and my new ones in 3+1/2 so I wanted the computer to be compatible with both. The 1.44Mb floppy drive is the only easy way to transfer programs from newer computers to old ones (there was not such thing as USB flash drive back then), so this has to be used. I also use the 5+1/4 drive to keep the vintage feeling of the computer but I have chosen the 1.2Mb capacity in order to save floppies. It still can read and write other 5+1/4 disk capacities, like 360Kb ones. If you want to format a 5+1/4 floppy of 360Kb using this drive you just have to add the parameter /F:360 to the format command (for example A:\format/F:360 B:).

Under Construction

 

Motherboard

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Graphics card

Under Construction

 

Network card

Under Construction

 

I/O interface card

Under Construction

 

Power supply

Under Construction

 

Acoustic Modem interface

I do not know if acoustic modems can still be used to with modern ISPs so I need some feedback on this. I have seen someone on the net that has used a commercial acoustic modem to connect to the internet, but it is not clear to me if he dials on an ISP or if he has setup a private service to dial to. Nevertheless I think that you can still use the acoustic coupler to transfer data between two remote computers in the world. Just make a call to the remote telephone of your friend using your telephone. Speak to him to let him know that you want to transfer data. Once you are both ready to transfer data, put your telephone microphone/speaker onto the acoustic coupler interface. Then you can start the data exchange.

The acoustic modem interface is an external part of the PC-XT. There is no need to reserve another valuable 8-bit card interface of the PC, as it is not controlled by the PC, so it only needs to connect to the COM port of it, to be able to transfer serial data by the use of acoustic tones and FSK modulation. I was looking for some time to find any information on an easy to build acoustic coupler until Max Klinger provided this valuable information. Currently I have found two such single chip modems that can be easily build if you find the vintage chips.

TCM3105NL single chip modem
74HC942 single chip modem

Under Construction

 


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