PC-6000 series
PC-6001 (No brown keyboard frame) | |
Manufacturer | NEC Home Electronics |
---|---|
Type | Home computer |
Release date | November 1981 |
Introductory price | ¥89,800 |
Units sold | 150,000 (PC-6001)[1] |
Media | ROM Cartridge, Cassette tape |
CPU | Zilog Z80 compatible µPD 780c-1 clocked at 3.8MHz, MC6847 compatible co-processor M5C6847P-1 |
Memory | 16-32KB RAM, 20KB ROM |
Display | 256×192 (monochrome), 128×192 (2 colors), 64×48 (9 colors), 256×128, 128×128 |
Input | Keyboard |
Predecessor | NEC PC-8000 |
Successor |
NEC PC-6601 NEC PC-8801 |
The NEC PC-6000 Series was a series of 8-bit home computers introduced in November 1981 by NEC Home Electronics (NEC-HE). There were several models in this series, such as the PC-6001, the PC-6001 MK2 and the PC-6001 MK2 SR. There was also an American version, called the NEC TREK, or NEC PC-6001A. It was followed by the PC-6600 Series.
Several peripherals were available for the system in North America, including an expander with three cartridge jacks (some of the cartridge-based games used two cartridges), a cassette-tape recorder, a 5.25" floppy disk drive, a printer, and a touchpad.
Development
NEC-HE was a subsidiary company of NEC and manufacturer of consumer electronics. In 1980, they started manufacturing the PC-8001 which was developed by the Electronic Devices division of NEC. It was successful and grew the personal computer market in Japan. They started developing a low-cost home computer, and it became the PC-6001. At the same time, the Electronic Devices division developed the PC-8801 for home and business, and the Information Systems division developed the PC-9801 for business. In 1983, NEC had four personal computer lines come out from different divisions. To avoid confliction, they decided to consolidate personal computer business into two divisions; NEC-HE dealt with the 8-bit home computer line, and the Information Systems division dealt with the 16-bit personal computer line. NEC-HE discontinued development of the PC-6000 series, the PC-6600 series, and the PC-8000 series. They were merged to the PC-8800 series.[2]
PC-6001
The PC-6001 has the µPD780 processor (NEC clone of Zilog Z80), 16 KB RAM (up to 32 KB), General Instrument AY-3-8910 3-voice sound generator, a ROM Cartridge connector, a casette tape interface, 2 x joystick port, a parallel printer connector, an RF modulator output and a composite video output. It supports four screen modes; 32x16 characters with 4 colors, 64x48 pixel graphics with 9 colors, 128x192 graphics with 4 colors, and 256x192 graphics with white and green colors. The ROM cartridge allowed the user to easily use software such as video games. Japanese version uses a chiclet keyboard while an American version (PC-6001A) uses a typewriter keyboard.
PC-6001mkII
The PC-6001mkII has 64 KB memory, 16 KB video RAM, a 5¼-inch 2D floppy drive interface, Kanji character generator, RGB monitor out, speech synthesizer unit and a typewriter keybaord. It supports following screen modes; 40x20 characters, 80x80 pixel graphics with 15 colors, 160x200 graphics with 15 colors, and 320x200 graphics with 4 colors.
References
- Notes
- NEC PC 6001, OLD-COMPUTERS.COM: The Museum
- NEC PC 6001 MK 2, OLD-COMPUTERS.COM: The Museum
- NEC PC 6001 MK 2 SR, OLD-COMPUTERS.COM: The Museum