Project to provide keyboard replacements for various classic computers, as well as classic ASCII keyboard
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Dave fb28dd34fc Multiple fixes to classic keyboard for fit and build ease
- remove material from PCB to allow keyboard to fit in Apple II case

- enlarge center hole on cherry MX footprints slightly, to 0.160" to allow
slightly more tolerance, which eases assembly.

- include holes for LEDs on futaba aligner

- include extra pads on main PCB for LEDs with futaba keys

- Add LED on LINE FEED which maps to REPEAT/CAPSLOCK on Apple II keymap
2020-06-17 01:00:01 -05:00
firmware/asdf Bug fix: long delay should invoke _delay_ms(), not _delay_us(). 2020-05-23 23:28:00 -05:00
hardware Multiple fixes to classic keyboard for fit and build ease 2020-06-17 01:00:01 -05:00
.gitignore Update gitignore 2020-06-16 13:13:52 -05:00
README.md Update README to add OSI module 2020-06-06 17:00:15 -05:00

Unified Retrocomputer Keyboard Project

This project aims to provide a (near) universal collection of keyboards for vintage computers. Home computers of the 1970's typically either polled a switch matrix, or interfaced to a parallel ASCII keyboard via a parallel port.

The keyboard allows use of Cherry MX keys, or Futaba MD-4PCS (aka George Risk KBM-01-01) keys.

The keyboard is designed using KiCad in order to be the most useful for anybody wishing to modify the keyboard for more specific uses, or to add to the project.

Capabilities so far:

  • Replacement keyboard for OSI computers
  • Replacement keyboard for Apple II/II+ computers
  • Replacement keyboard for the Sol-20 computer
  • Generic ADM-3A/Teletype style keyboard
  • Apple I keyboard (multiple styles)

Coming soon:

  • Replace encoder board on Apple II/II+ keyboards
  • Convert an OSI 542 keyboard into a generic ASCII keyboard

This keyboard project so far consists of:

  • A classic retro-style ASCII keyboard, modeled after the ADM-3A keyboard, which can be also be populated to fit perfectly in an Apple II/II+ case (with corresponding Apple II keymaps), or an OSI case (with OSI adapter).
  • A Sol-20 compatible keyboard.
  • Keyscan/decoder interface modules that can output parallel ASCII, and can be adapted for other protocols.
  • An OSI interface module, to connect the classic keyboard to an OSI computer.