Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Inside the Apple IIe

In response to my October 26, 2008 post, Rob said, “Am I correct in assuming that your Platinum //e came with a "SoftCard" or clone? Did it come with any other unique hardware like a clock? (for us old timers, clocks were a neat thing)”

The short answer is, “no.” The IIe came with a Super Serial Card, an 80-column 64k RAM card, and a floppy disk controller card (with two working half-height floppy drives.)

I did find an original Microsoft SoftCard at a garage sale. The seller warned me that it would not fit any modern computer and that I would need an older PC-XT or Versa Local Bus to use the card. I thanked him for the information, handed him my $5, and took the change. I set the switches, plugged it in, and it ran the flawlessly.

Along the way, I also picked up a parallel printer card that works well with a Brother laser printer in default Epson FX mode.

Therefore, the inside of the Apple IIe looks like this:
  • 0 — 80-column, 64k RAM card
  • 1 — Parallel Printer Card
  • 2 — Super Serial Card
  • 3 — (empty)
  • 4 — Microsoft SoftCard
  • 5 — (empty)
  • 6 — Floppy Drive Controller
  • 7 — MicroDrive IDE/CF Card
By default, the system boots into ProDOS on the MicroDrive. When I want to use CP/M, DOS 3.3, or Apple UCSD Pascal I put the disks in the floppy drives and reboot there.

I am still mucking around with DOS.MASTER and have yet to get it to work. Thankfully, the recent supply of 5.25” disks allows me to run the other systems until I either get DOS.MASTER to run right or give up on it entirely.

3 comments:

Unknown said...

Thanks for the update!

northsongs said...

Hello,
I found your blog on the Apple Ii and enjoyed it. I also have 'rediscovered' the old Apple II days recently. It's been fun going through the old software, discovering 'Asimov' and all the old stuff I wanted back then, but couldn't afford. Anyway, thanks for sharing. Keep it up!
northsongs

Unknown said...

I found your apple log and it reads a lot like my experience with rediscovering my old friend, the Apple IIe. We made a lot of the same choices. I'd like to know more of the story if you get the chance. You can read about my Apple IIe shenanigans at www.appleslices.info if you would like. Take Care and Keep On Applin'!