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Radio Shack Quick Printer II Reference Handbook

Radio Shack Quick Printer II
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heory
System Clock
The
System
Clock
is
shown
on
Sheet
2
of
the
fold-out
Schematics
at
the
back
of
this
book.
Y1
is
a
10.6445
MHz,
fundamental-cut
crystal.
It
is
in a series
resonant
circuit
consisting
of
two
inverters. Z42, pins 1
and
2.
and
3
and
4,
form
two
inverting amplifiers.
Feedback
between
the
inverters
is
supplied
by
C43,
a
47
pF
capacitor.
R46
and
R52
force
the
inverters used
in
the
oscillator
to
operate
in
their
linear region.
The
waveform
at
pin 5
of
Z42
will resemble a
sine wave
at
10.6445
MHz.
The
oscillator
should
not
be
measured
at
this
point,
however,
due
to
the
loading
effects
test
equipment
would
have
at
this
node. Z42, pin
6,
is
the
output
of
the
oscil-
lator
buffer. Clock
measurements
may
be
made
at
this
point.
The
output
of
the
buffer
is
applied
to
three
main sections:
the
CPU
timing
circuit,
the
video divider
chain,
and
the
video processing
circuit.
CPU Timing
The
Z80
microprocessor
needs a single phase
clock
source
for
operation.
The
10
MHz signal
from
System
Clock
is
applied
to
Z56,
a
standard
ripple
counter,
which
is
used as a divide-by-6
counter.
The
resulting signal
at
Z56,
pin
8,
is
a
little
over
1.774
MHz.
The
signal
is
applied
to
the
input
of
buffer
Z72,
pin 12. Pin
11
of
Z72
is
attached
to
pin 6
of
the
Z80
microprocessor.
R64
pulls
up
pin
11
of
Z72,
and
insures a rapid-
ly increasing rise
time
for
the
clock
signal.
Notice
that
pin
15
of
Z72
is
tied
to
ground.
Since
pin 15
is
the
enable
input
to
th
is
part
of
Z72. pins
12
and
11
will always
be
active.
14
f peration
Notice also pins 7 and 6
of
Z56.
These
two
pins
enable
the
clear
function
for
the
counter.
When
one
or
both
of
these
pins
is
low,
the
counter
operates
normally. When high,
the
input
forces
the
counter
into
its clear
or
reset
state.
Z42, pins 9
and
8,
are used
to
disable
counter
Z56
during
automatic
testing
at
the
factory.
R67 pulls
Z42's
input
to
Vee,
which causes
pin
8
to
stay
at
a logical low. During
testing,
pin
9
of
Z42
may
be pulled low,
making
pin 8 high,
which disables
and
clears
Z56.
NOTE: You
might
also find early Board ver-
sions
("AI!
Boards
for
example)
where
pins 6
and
7
of
Z56
are
tied
directly
to
ground.
Power-Up-Clear
and
System
Reset
As
mentioned
in
the
Block Diagram discussion,
upon
power-on
the
CPU accesses a
known
address
in
the
ROM
for
instructions.
The
circuit-
ry which causes
the
starting
address
output
is
shown
just
below
the
microprocessor
clock
divider.
Z53
is
a
2-input,
quad
NAND gate.
(Note
that
Z53
is
drawn
as an inverted
input
OR gate.)
When
power
is
first applied
to
the
system,
C42
is
at
(i'volts. R47
is
tied
to
Vee
and
starts
charg-
ing
C4
at
a
known
rate. While
C4
is
charging,
and
before
the
voltage
exceeds
the
logical 1 level
for
Z53,
pin
11
outputs
a high. This high
is
in-
verted
by
Z52,
pins
11
and
10,
and
a low
is
applied
to
pin
26
of
Z40.
A low
at
this
input
forces
the
microprocessor
to
output
the
starting
address
0000
on
its 16
address lines. When
e42
charges
up
past
about
1.4
volts,
Z53,
pin 11, goes low, which causes
Z52, pin 10,
to
go high.
The
CPU
is
now
out
of

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Radio Shack Quick Printer II Specifications

General IconGeneral
BrandRadio Shack
ModelQuick Printer II
CategoryDesktop
LanguageEnglish

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