A 5120

The A 5120 was an office computer produced by VEB Robotron in Karl-Marx-Stadt (now Chemnitz), East Germany starting in 1982. [1] The system featured an 8-bit microprocessor, the U880. [1] It was built for office work and had minimal graphics and sound capabilities. The price was between 27,000 and 40,000 East German marks (around 24,000-35,000 2016 US dollars) depending on equipment.

A 5120
ManufacturerVEB Robotron
Release date
  • A5120: 1982 (1982) [1]
  • A5120.16: 1986 (1986)
Introductory price
  • A 5120: 27,000-40,000 marks
  • A 5120.16: 32,000-48,000 marks
Units shipped17,000 (A 5120 and A 5120.16)
Operating systemSCP (CP/M clone), UDOS (Z80-RIO clone)
CPU
Memory
  • A 5120: normally 16KiB-64KiB, more possible [1]
  • A 5120.16: 256KiB
Storagetwo cassette drives, then later one 8" floppy drive, or up to three 5.25" floppy drives [1]
DisplayIntegrated monochrome monitor
SuccessorPC 1715

In 1986, a new version was produced, the A 5120.16. The system was identical to the A 5120, with the addition of two additional boards, one with a U8000 16-bit microprocessor (a Zilog Z8000 clone), and one with 256KiB DRAM. The original 8-bit system functioned as an I/O subsystem. In this configuration it could run the relatively powerful MUTOS8000 (Unix System III derivative). The price of this model was between about 32,000 and 48,000 East German marks.

In total, about 17,000 A 5120 and A 5120.16 units were manufactured. [2]

In March 1983, a stamp was issued by the German Democratic Republic featuring the A 5120. 4.5 million copies were printed. [3]

An A 5120 was featured in the 2015 television show Deutschland 83 as an example of technological disparity between East and West Germany in the early 1980s.

Technical details

The original A 5120 had two U880 (Zilog Z80 clone) 8-bit processors, running at 2.25MHz or 2.5MHz. One was dedicated to I/O, while the other was used for normal work. Each was capable of about 625,000 operations per second. It normally came with 16KiB of RAM, but a few units shipped with less. When higher-capacity DRAM chips became available, most units shipped with at least 64KiB, and some with as much as 112KiB.

The A 5120.16 upgrade included two new circuit boards, one with a 16-bit U8001 processor (clone of Zilog Z8000), and the other with 256KiB of additional RAM. The original 8-bit system functioned as a terminal to the 16-bit system.

For storage, the first A 5120 units had dual magnetic cassette drives, but when the floppy disk version became available, all of these units were converted. The first floppy disk version of the machine included an 8-inch floppy disk drive, with two additional 8-inch drives available in a separate unit. Later, the A 5120 included up to three 5.25-inch drives in place of the 8-inch drive. [4]

Images

gollark: OH POTATOSThe JSON body *encoded in a form thingy* has some sort of insane vaguely RPC-like thing going on.
gollark: ACCURSED
gollark: THIS IS ACCURSEDMY ROUTER'S ADMIN PANEL'S WEB FRONTEND SENDS JSON URLENCODED IN A FORM BODY
gollark: I would have to remove the line in ABR's code denying it.
gollark: ++delete tutorirriiral

See also

References

  1. "Robotron A5120". 8-bit Nirvana (in German). Retrieved 28 March 2016.
  2. Preußler, Klaus; Weise, Klaus-Dieter (31 October 2008). "Zusammenstellung der im VEB Kombinat Robotron produzierten Erzeugnisse der Rechentechnik, Teil 1: Rechner und Rechnersysteme (S. 6/7)" (PDF) (in German). Retrieved 28 March 2016.
  3. "Stamp: Robotron microcomputer (Germany, Democratic Republic (DDR)) (Leipzig Spring Fair) Mi:DD 2780,Sn:DD 2329,Yt:DD 2425,AFA:DD 2469". colnect. Retrieved 28 March 2016.
  4. "Computer Robotron A5120". robotrontechnik.de (in German). Retrieved 28 March 2016.
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