RIP to BT Garner of MindRec.com... BT passed away early 2023 from health problems. He was one of the top PCE homebrew developers and founder of the OG Turbo List, then PCECP.com. Condolences to family and friends.
IMG
IMG
Main Menu

What would it take...

Started by BigusSchmuck, 06/15/2012, 12:15 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 0 Guests are viewing this topic.

BigusSchmuck

To start manufacturing turbo/pcengine motherboards? It can't be all that hard considering how cheap technology has gotten as of late...

BlueBMW

The trouble I see is the handful of proprietary chips that cannot be sourced.  Maybe they could be reverse engineered and manufactured, but I suspect that would be cost prohibitive.
[Sun 23:29] <Tatsujin> we have hard off, book off, house off, sports off, baby off, clothes off, jerk off, piss off etc

SignOfZeta

It takes serious money to manufacture chips, no matter how old they are. If you FPGAed it you could do it for very little money, but it would take someone with considerable skill and access to Hudson-level documentation to orchestrate such a thing.

Not really worth it since a real PCE can be had for $50 anyway...

Now, a serial ATA adaptor...that would be something worth doing. :)
IMG

soop

#3
I don't know how possible it is, but ideally you want the equivilent to a NES on a chip.  cheap as ... er, chips :D

Here, look at this old post: https://www.pcengine-fx.com/forums/index.php?topic=4034.10

And it looks like someone has actually made one;
I'd love to see this being produced, as (aside from the HuCard slot) it would be so easy to make a low power, ultra-portable PC-Engine.  I'd fucking love that, it would probably cost about £50 to make, with half that being the LCD screen.
Quote from: esteban on 04/26/2018, 04:44 PMSHUTTLECOCK OR SHUFFLE OFF!

spenoza

I contacted the creator of that FPGA project via YouTube and he's using a non-free 6502 core, so he can't share or use the project commercially. I know there are a couple open/free 6502 cores out there, though, so if he was interested in sharing this project he could probably just substitute much of the data.

soop

Quote from: guest on 06/15/2012, 10:49 AMI contacted the creator of that FPGA project via YouTube and he's using a non-free 6502 core, so he can't share or use the project commercially. I know there are a couple open/free 6502 cores out there, though, so if he was interested in sharing this project he could probably just substitute much of the data.
Nice one Spenoza :)  Hope he does!
Quote from: esteban on 04/26/2018, 04:44 PMSHUTTLECOCK OR SHUFFLE OFF!