Apple II 3.5 Disk Controller Card: Difference between revisions

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In 2006 Henry from ReActiveMicro was successful in cracking and testing the PLDs on the Apple II 3.5 Disk Controller Card.  This is the first step in producing a cloned card.
In 2006 Henry from ReActiveMicro was successful in cracking and testing the PLDs on the Apple II 3.5 Disk Controller Card.  This is the first step in producing a cloned card.


In 2007 Anthony from UltimateApplew and Henry discussed the Apple II 3.5" Disk Controller Card project and they decided to move ahead with Proof of Concept boards.  Henry depopulated his Apple II 3.5 Disk Controller Card and sent it to be scanned.  In 2008 Proof of Concept PCBs were ordered.  And in 2009 Anthony and Henry sold assembled units at KFEST.
In 2007 Anthony from UltimateApplew and Henry discussed the Apple II 3.5" Disk Controller Card project and they decided to move ahead with Proof of Concept boards.  Henry depopulated his Apple II 3.5 Disk Controller Card and sent it to be scanned.  In 2008 Proof of Concept PCBs were ordered.  And in 2009 Anthony and Henry hand assembled boards and sold them at KFEST.


The first run of boards were mislabeled "A2DiskCrontoller v1.0".  These Proof of Concept PCBs however proved the CAD files and Bill of Materials were good, and other runs of boards could be produced from these files.
The first run of boards were 1-to-1 clones with only the Silkscreen layer updated by Henry.  In the rush they were mislabeled "A2DiskCrontoller v1.0".  These Proof of Concept PCBs however proved the CAD files and Bill of Materials were good, and other runs of boards could be produced from these files.
<gallery class="center" widths=500px heights=250px>
<gallery class="center" widths=500px heights=250px>
File:A2DiskController_v1.0_-_Face-Wik.png|A2DiskCrontoller v1.0
File:A2DiskController_v1.0_-_Face-Wik.png|A2DiskCrontoller v1.0
</gallery>
</gallery>


On 2016-02-10 the layout was edited, changed slightly, and incremented to v1.1.  Ten more Proof of Concept PCBs were ordered to prove the design as well as sell.  Up to this point all board produced were hand assembled.
On 2016-02-10 Henry re-edited the layout, slightly updated the Silkscreen layer, and incremented to v1.1.  Ten more Proof of Concept PCBs were ordered to reprove the design changed and sell.  Up to this point all board produced were hand assembled.
<gallery class="center" widths=300px heights=200px>
<gallery class="center" widths=300px heights=200px>
File:2018-07-09_-_A2Disk_v1.1-Wiki.png|A2DiskController v1.1 - Face
File:2018-07-09_-_A2Disk_v1.1-Wiki.png|A2DiskController v1.1 - Face
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</gallery>
</gallery>


On 2016-03-25 Henry continued to edit the v1.1 design to support a smaller Resistor Network, the newer WDC C02 CPU, 27 and 28C/F series EPROM, and SOJ SRAM.  He also tented all visa and added a Silkscreen layer to make assembly much simpler.  He incremented the design to v1.2.  This design however was plagued with issues due to many changes at once combined with CAD issues.  Ultimately the design was abandoned and the project was rolled back to v1.1.


On
 
 
On 2018-05-09 the project was revisited due to demand and others who had failed attempts in making a 3.5" Drive Controller of their own.  Henry re-edited the project hard by changing the footprint for the Resistor Pack to something more commonly available in today's market.  He also edited the CPU footprint to allow for use of the newer WDC 65C02 CPU.  All PLCC parts were socketed so the boards could be factory assembled, which marks the new direction ReActiveMicro has taken since its full return back to the retro screen in mid-July 2016.  The original Silkscreen layer was added back to the board and cleaned up to make to more readable.

Revision as of 05:59, 13 July 2018

The Apple II 3.5" Disk Controller Card, also know as the SuperDrive Card, is a 3.5" drive controller card for the Apple II/II+/IIe/IIgs designed originally by Apple Computers. The card allows a simple way to connect a 3.5" Disk Drives to the Apple II computers. All Apple drives are supported, as well as AE and some other clone drives. A total of two drive can be added by using the card.

In 2008 this project marked the first collaboration between [ReActiveMicro] and UltimateApple2.

Project Status: Completed. In production. Actively sold by ReActiveMicro.

Support: Post on the Discussion page (link above) or email ReActiveMicro Support.

Sales: Visit the ReActiveMicro Store.


History

In 2006 Henry from ReActiveMicro was successful in cracking and testing the PLDs on the Apple II 3.5 Disk Controller Card. This is the first step in producing a cloned card.

In 2007 Anthony from UltimateApplew and Henry discussed the Apple II 3.5" Disk Controller Card project and they decided to move ahead with Proof of Concept boards. Henry depopulated his Apple II 3.5 Disk Controller Card and sent it to be scanned. In 2008 Proof of Concept PCBs were ordered. And in 2009 Anthony and Henry hand assembled boards and sold them at KFEST.

The first run of boards were 1-to-1 clones with only the Silkscreen layer updated by Henry. In the rush they were mislabeled "A2DiskCrontoller v1.0". These Proof of Concept PCBs however proved the CAD files and Bill of Materials were good, and other runs of boards could be produced from these files.

On 2016-02-10 Henry re-edited the layout, slightly updated the Silkscreen layer, and incremented to v1.1. Ten more Proof of Concept PCBs were ordered to reprove the design changed and sell. Up to this point all board produced were hand assembled.

On 2016-03-25 Henry continued to edit the v1.1 design to support a smaller Resistor Network, the newer WDC C02 CPU, 27 and 28C/F series EPROM, and SOJ SRAM. He also tented all visa and added a Silkscreen layer to make assembly much simpler. He incremented the design to v1.2. This design however was plagued with issues due to many changes at once combined with CAD issues. Ultimately the design was abandoned and the project was rolled back to v1.1.


On 2018-05-09 the project was revisited due to demand and others who had failed attempts in making a 3.5" Drive Controller of their own. Henry re-edited the project hard by changing the footprint for the Resistor Pack to something more commonly available in today's market. He also edited the CPU footprint to allow for use of the newer WDC 65C02 CPU. All PLCC parts were socketed so the boards could be factory assembled, which marks the new direction ReActiveMicro has taken since its full return back to the retro screen in mid-July 2016. The original Silkscreen layer was added back to the board and cleaned up to make to more readable.