CatPix Posted January 16, 2017 Share Posted January 16, 2017 Back in the good ole time, when a good third of the world was under Bolchevic rule... KPO ElectronMash, in Kiev, then part of the USSR, released the Poisk-1, (the KPO Электронмаш ПОИСК-1,originally "Poisk", renamed Poisk-1 after the release of Poisk -2 and Poisk-3 computers, which were to my understanding rebadged ordinary 286 and 386 PCs) in 1991. Just in time to be a "made in USSR" product. sales figures are impossible to find, but it seems that the Poisk-1 was produced at least up to 1994, and accessories were made for it up to 1996.The Poisk-1 is an IBM-XT clone, powered by a KM1810VM88 (8088 clone) @ 4.77Mhtz, 128 Ko of RAM.It come with a tape input, 3 video output : black and white composite video out, RGB (SCART compatible) output, and CGA output. Under the slot covers lies 4 connectors that allow to plug expensions modules. Amazingly (or not) several add-on cards were made. The main and most desirable ones add floppy drive support, hard drive support and 512Ko of extra RAM, there is also printer port, COM ports, sound card, joystick support... From what I've seen, none of those expansions have pass-through connectors, so you can only have 4 expansions at once plugged on it. From what I got, those mentions down the keyboard are "Electronic" and "Information and game complex". I tried several time, changing the order, etc... but it does seems that this computer was sold as a game machine. It's showtime ! journée capot ouvert! Let's have some devious motherboard pictures.Sadly, it appears it didn't survived the travel from Ukraine too well : Hopefully, the trouble lie in the pwoer supply. I do'nt have the original one, so I used an old and dirty XT one. First using this schema : But here, the +5V is "key". So I used another 5Volts line but it didn't made it much better. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Seob Posted January 21, 2017 Share Posted January 21, 2017 Nice find. It's great to see what "the other side" had for computing. Hope you get it fully working again. Do you have a diskcontroller? Guess without it you cannot do much with it? Or how do you load programs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CatPix Posted January 21, 2017 Author Share Posted January 21, 2017 I don't have the disk controller. Tho I plan to get one as soon as I find the issue, which might take time. I would liek to find a simple way to troubleshoot the RAM, because it looks like an easy culprit. It's a little know fact, but the original IBM XT comptuers had a BASIC and a tape port. On this computer, without controlers modules, it's what you get : a BASIC boot and access to tape data. I have to figure out how to load a tape and see if the IBM Advanced diagnosis tape (apparently, the only software eever released on tape for IBM PC) accept to load and display me valuable infos. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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