The two 74LS258A chips multiplex the 14 bit address from the processor to the two lots of 7 bits that the DRAM need (7 bits for the row, 7 bits for the column of the memory matrix). They act as seven electronic change-over switches (the eighth will be unused).
The 74LS00 NAND gates (four gates, each with two inputs) will be for the address decoding and control logic.
The NE555 is likely being used to help produce the -5V supply rail that the DRAM chips need. One of the electrolytic capacitors, some diodes and a 5.1V zener diode are likely involved with this as well.
"AGB" means "Alain Grégoire Brégeon", two brothers interested in softwares (Alain) et the hardware (Grégoire).
Alain wrote an adventure game "La maison du professeur Folibus" on ZX81, and "Le passager du temps" on CPC.
Xavier ...on the Facebook groupe : "Zx81 France"(fr)
I found the AGB module on top of Monitor document particulary intriguing. Was it a hardware monitor/debugger or a composite-monitor adapter? It lead me to search, and I found this 16K Expansion for sale on eBay
Moggy wrote: ↑Sat Nov 23, 2024 1:32 pm
I think XavSnap may have some answers for this as would new member, jeffounet as it is part of his collection as seen here...
jeffounet wrote: ↑Fri Nov 22, 2024 11:54 am
Hello everyone,
... I am also passionate about the ZX81 (I bought the kit when it was released) and I own, today, 25 with more or less improvements "modifications".
You can see them on: https://forum.system-cfg.com/viewtopic. ... t+plus+%21
...
Jean-François
And now I see what the AGB Monitor is! Some sort of ROM ... so much to explore ...
Dim_75 wrote: ↑Sat Nov 23, 2024 3:08 pm
Hello,
yes AGB made extensions for both ZX81 (RAM, Sound card, RS232, UDG card...) and ZX Spectrum (Video UHF, joystick, RS232...)
XavSnap wrote: ↑Sat Nov 23, 2024 7:29 pm
"AGB" means "Alain Grégoire Brégeon", two brothers interested in softwares (Alain) et the hardware (Grégoire).
Alain wrote an adventure game "La maison du professeur Folibus" on ZX81, and "Le passager du temps" on CPC.
Thanks for the details on the chips. This is something I didn't know about ... that you can use an oscillator to drive a DC-DC converter. I was reading an older post of yours that explains it
1024MAK wrote: ↑Sat Nov 23, 2024 6:29 pm
The NE555 is likely being used to help produce the -5V supply rail that the DRAM chips need. One of the electrolytic capacitors, some diodes and a 5.1V zener diode are likely involved with this as well.