ZX81 T-shirts!
ZX Spectrum T-shirts!
Ready prompt T-shirts!
Atari joystick T-shirts!
Arcade cherry T-shirts!
Spiral program T-shirts!
Battle Zone T-shirts!
Vectrex ship T-shirts!
Competition Pro Joystick T-shirts!
Elite spaceship t-shirt T-shirts!
C64 maze generator T-shirts!
Atari ST bombs T-shirts!
Moon Lander T-shirts!
Pak Pak Monster T-shirts!
BASIC code T-shirts!
Pixel adventure T-shirts!
Breakout T-shirts!
Vector ship T-shirts!
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After the success of the TRS-80 Pocket Computer (a.k.a. TRS-80 PC-1), Sharp also manufactured their PC-1500 (see there for more technical information) in a version for Tandy Radio Shack.
This machine was marketed as the TRS-80 PC-2 (catalog number 26-3601). Internally, it was exactly the same machine. Only the front face design had been changed: the keyboard layout was different, with an additional enter key, and the display had been shifted to the right. Moreover, the colour style was also slightly different, with a light gray instead of brown back of the case.
Some peripherals supplied by Tandy were the "docking station" with 4 colour pen plotter and cassette interface (catalog number 26-3605), 4 and 8 KB RAM module (26-3615 and 26-3616), an external tape interface (26-3605) and an RS-232 interface (26-3612). Of course, all peripherals developed for the Sharp PC-1500 could also be used.
Thanks to Roman von Wartburg and his site for information and picture.
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Just found our TRS-80 PC2...popped some batteries into it and it works! Haven''t found the instructions as yet or if there is a printer/cassette cartridge anywhere. I''ll keep looking. Can''t believe it still works...looks like new and it has the soft carry case it came in that''s like new as well.
| Tuesday 16th November 2021 | Jan D (Canada) | | |
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I got mine in 1983 or 1984, if I remember correctly Radio Shack was closing them out and we had to visit three stores, where I bought the last one. I also got the printer/cassette interface. In digging through old boxes today, I found my device along with the documentation for it. Still had batteries in it, unfortunately. Looking at doing a restoration and just looking around to see what''s out there about this machine, that I used to love back then.
| Sunday 7th October 2018 | David (USA) | | |
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This PC was actually built by Sharp Electronics for Tandy Corp. The Sharp version called a PC-1500 had a normal looking keyboard with the letters arranged in a normal Qwerty setup. The Tandy version had more keys by having an extra enter key with the numeric pad. Very little to criticise either way. They functioned the same and were very powerful for there day. A very good optional extra was the printer/dual cassette port interface. If you were handy at tinkering you could expand the memory to 64K. I had 16k on mine and used it for processing engine dynamometer data.
| Monday 30th January 2017 | Don Sutton (Australia) | | |
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