+Ksarul #1 Posted June 7, 2014 Here are pictures of the TI Prototyping Board for the PEB. For those interested in purchasing them, they are $25 each, shipped to a US address. 10 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
humeur #2 Posted June 7, 2014 Very Good Work Jim Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
+OLD CS1 #3 Posted June 7, 2014 Nicely done. A very generic and useful board, indeed. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Gary from OPA #4 Posted June 7, 2014 Yikes, nice looking, so much better then the original prototyping board. One thing I would like to see is 'sidecar' prototyping board to work on projects that don't need a PEB. Another thing I would like to see but it is big one, a replacement PEB box, with nice molded case, and two options a full 8 card or bigger 10 card a smaller 5 card, maybe a design were two 5 card peb's can be plugged in together. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Willsy #5 Posted June 7, 2014 Wow! Awesome! 2 please! How much is shipping to the UK? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
+OLD CS1 #6 Posted June 7, 2014 One thing I would like to see is 'sidecar' prototyping board to work on projects that don't need a PEB. 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Vorticon #7 Posted June 7, 2014 Nice work! I'd like to take one please. Please PM with payment details. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ti99iuc #8 Posted June 8, 2014 Nice work... one for me too please Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
+Ksarul #9 Posted June 8, 2014 I can set up a sidecar board relatively easily--and was actually thinking along that line in response to one of Acadiel's ideas. I'll try and add that to the queue. . . 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
+acadiel #10 Posted June 8, 2014 I can set up a sidecar board relatively easily--and was actually thinking along that line in response to one of Acadiel's ideas. I'll try and add that to the queue. . . Yep, Ksarul and I discussed it extensively one night. We have some pretty cool ideas for sidecar boards. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TI-Sissy #11 Posted June 8, 2014 Here are pictures of the TI Prototyping Board for the PEB. For those interested in purchasing them, they are $25 each, shipped to a US address. this is neat. this might get my bf interested in my lil ti. i could get a pbox out of this too. he assembles but does not invent stuff. anything that we build will have to be from plans. a thread on protoboard projects would be neat. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
+Ksarul #12 Posted June 8, 2014 I believe there were a lot of potential protoboard projects identified in the TI Interface Standards and Design Guide book by Tony Lewis, TI-Sissy. There were a lot of them published in various user group newsletters as well. The P-GRAM card first showed up as a protoboard project in one of them, IIRC, as did a light pen board. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Omega-TI #13 Posted June 9, 2014 I believe there were a lot of potential protoboard projects identified in the TI Interface Standards and Design Guide book by Tony Lewis, TI-Sissy. There were a lot of them published in various user group newsletters as well. The P-GRAM card first showed up as a protoboard project in one of them, IIRC, as did a light pen board. Hmmmmm, 'veddy interestink'. It looks like there may finally be a chance in H E double toothpick of me getting an RTC built. I know a guy who has a copy of the CorComp programming, so all I'd need to do is get a schematic, source the parts and... Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
+Ksarul #14 Posted June 9, 2014 IIRC, there were several RTC variants for the protoboards. . . Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CantStopClicking #15 Posted June 21, 2014 (edited) I believe there were a lot of potential protoboard projects identified in the TI Interface Standards and Design Guide book by Tony Lewis, TI-Sissy. There were a lot of them published in various user group newsletters as well. The P-GRAM card first showed up as a protoboard project in one of them, IIRC, as did a light pen board. Can anyone who has the "TI Interface Standards and Design Guide" by Tony Lewis, check and see if they have "Section H. Miscellaneous Design Considerations"? (as well as the missing parts of Section I) Sadly, those two seemingly important sections are missing from all the sources I have come across. Would love to get those if anyone can help. hmmm.... is there a conspiracy theory going on here?!?!? Cheers! -Dano Edited June 21, 2014 by CantStopClicking Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
+arcadeshopper #16 Posted November 16, 2014 now available on arcadeshopper.com http://www.arcadeshopper.com/wp/?page_id=11#!/TI-PEB-Prototyping-Board/p/44354007/category=5051340 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Gary from OPA #17 Posted November 16, 2014 Neat, now I just need another empty PEB to put the card in all my boxes are filled up. I wonder what neat things people will think of? and build using this board now that is is available. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Omega-TI #18 Posted November 16, 2014 Neat, now I just need another empty PEB to put the card in all my boxes are filled up. I wonder what neat things people will think of? and build using this board now that is is available. I would be fun to see this thread continue with the inclusion of at least a couple of "Step-By-Step Projects" that include lots of photos. I feel that many people would like to build something for themselves, but don't think they are ready to tackle such a project. Back in the day, Heathkit showed a couple of generations that yes, they too could build it. Something in that format as a first kit project would have all the parts and pieces in a bag and all IC's would be socketed so the newbie would not have to worry about heat damaging the guts of the project. The PDF instructions of any project could be posted in this thread for FREE, that way the interested could see in advance how simple the project would be. The instructions alone would probably sell a few kits. Just an idea. Now of course 'someone' with the skills would have to build one of these first, document all their actions, taking lots of photos along the way, author the instructions, turn it all into a PDF and then upload it. Who said fame was easy? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Gazoo #19 Posted November 16, 2014 Looks like a nice card to build a replacement AVPC or EVPC card with VGA output. If someone with the knowledge could lay it out, it's a foregone conclusion that it would be built. Gazoo Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
firepod #20 Posted November 16, 2014 Fantastic Ideas man!!!! I would be fun to see this thread continue with the inclusion of at least a couple of "Step-By-Step Projects" that include lots of photos. I feel that many people would like to build something for themselves, but don't think they are ready to tackle such a project. Back in the day, Heathkit showed a couple of generations that yes, they too could build it. Something in that format as a first kit project would have all the parts and pieces in a bag and all IC's would be socketed so the newbie would not have to worry about heat damaging the guts of the project. The PDF instructions of any project could be posted in this thread for FREE, that way the interested could see in advance how simple the project would be. The instructions alone would probably sell a few kits. Just an idea. Now of course 'someone' with the skills would have to build one of these first, document all their actions, taking lots of photos along the way, author the instructions, turn it all into a PDF and then upload it. Who said fame was easy? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
+Ksarul #21 Posted July 11, 2015 I just received another run of these boards, for those interested in them. The price is the same as before, $25 when shipped to a US address. 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
apersson850 #22 Posted July 6, 2017 (edited) IIRC, there were several RTC variants for the protoboards. . . You can see a picture of my RTC. It's the card with the battery on top. When I did that one, there was none available for purchase, at least none I was aware of at that time. By coincidence, I use the same clock chip as later showed up on the P-GRAM card. Funny enough, I noticed that when I run the configuration program (CFG) that comes with the ROS 8.14F for the Horizon RAMdisk, it scans the box for all cards it can find. It's unable to figure out what a standard p-code card is, but my one-card-in-the-world clock card it does identify correctly as a CLOCK CARD. Edited July 6, 2017 by apersson850 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites