Using a PS/2-Keyboard on an Apple II

This page describes how you can easily build a converter to use normal PC-Keyboards with a PS/2-Connector on an Apple II.

Why?

I was cleaning up my cellar the other day as I found my old Apple II europlus. Since it was the computer I've started programming on (not in the 70s, though) I'm a little emotionally attached to that old beast and decided to toy around with it a bit -- AFTER cleaning up the cellar of course .

Unfortunately most of the keys hardly worked, quite some were completely broken -- the age (around 30 years) definitely shows. I tried to fix the keys a few years ago but gave up, since they kept breaking at an incredible rate.

Thus I decided to build a converter that enables me to use a common (and much more convenient) PC-keyboard.

This is what you'll need

I might sell or trade a preflashed PIC, if I have PICs available.

Building it

These are the schematics:

The pin-assignments of the PIC seem a little random, especially the Dx-lines. However, like this it's possible to piggy-back the PIC (14 pins) on top of the keyboard-socket (16 pins) on the motherboard. It's not hard to figure out how, here are a few tips for the lazy:

If piggy-backing is too much fiddling for you, you can always put everything on a small board and use the ribbon-cable.

Power is drawn from the Apple via the keyboard-socket (pins 1 and 8 of SV1), so you don't need any extra wiring for power.

This is how it looks here:

On the right you can see the inserted piggy-back-construction and a ribbon-cable to the PS/2-socket on the left, which I hotglued there.

Using it

After you've build and connected everything, turn the power on and push keys on the keyboard; the keys you push there should correspondent with those you see on the screen .

Notes:

File(s)

Closing words

That's it already, I hope you'll waste as much sweet time building it as I did . As always, I'd be happy to get mail if you built it successfully! And also: малышка <3

References

2008-08-20 15:58