dZ80 vs. Alternatives: Which Z80-Compatible Board Is Right for You?

dZ80: A Beginner’s Guide to Features and Setup

What dZ80 is

dZ80 is a modern Z80-compatible development board/system aimed at hobbyists and retro-computing enthusiasts. It combines classic Z80 CPU architecture compatibility with contemporary peripherals and tooling to make building, experimenting, and learning easier.

Key features

  • Z80-compatible CPU: Runs classic Z80 instruction set for software and ROMs written for Z80 systems.
  • On-board RAM and ROM: Sufficient memory for small OSes, interpreters (e.g., BASIC), and hobby projects.
  • Storage interfaces: SD card or SPI flash support for storing programs and disk images.
  • I/O ports: GPIO, UART/serial, and possibly PS/2 or USB-host/client for keyboard/mouse and serial consoles.
  • Video output: Composite, VGA, or HDMI options on some variants for text/graphics output.
  • Expansion headers: Breakout pins for adding peripherals, memory-mapped devices, or custom circuits.
  • Power options: USB power or barrel jack with onboard regulation.
  • Bootloader/ROM monitor: Built-in monitor for loading and debugging programs.
  • Community/tooling: Emulator support, example projects, and community-contributed libraries and schematics.

Typical use cases

  • Learning assembly language and vintage computing concepts.
  • Running or porting retro software and BASIC interpreters.
  • Building custom retro-style games or demos.
  • Interfacing vintage peripherals or designing new hardware add-ons.
  • Embedded-control experiments using simple, low-power CPU.

Quick start setup (assumes a generic dZ80 board)

  1. Unpack & inspect: Check board for damage and identify connectors (power, video, SD, UART).
  2. Power: Connect USB or regulated 5V supply to the power input. Confirm LEDs/power indicator light up.
  3. Console connection: Attach a USB-serial adapter to the UART pins (TX/RX/GND) or connect keyboard/monitor if supported. Open a terminal (e.g., 115200 8N1) to view boot messages.
  4. Insert storage: Place an SD card with a prepared disk image or files (filesystem/ROM) if required.
  5. Boot & access monitor: Power on; use the monitor/bootloader to list files, load programs, or jump to memory addresses.
  6. Load software: Transfer programs via serial XMODEM/YMODEM, copy files on SD card, or use the bootloader commands.
  7. Test a sample program: Run a simple BASIC or assembly test provided by the project to confirm CPU, memory, and I/O work.
  8. Develop: Write or modify code on your PC, assemble/compile with a cross-assembler (e.g., z88dk, SJASM), then transfer and run on dZ80.

Common troubleshooting

  • No power LED: Check power supply polarity and minimum voltage; measure with multimeter.
  • No serial output: Verify ground common, correct TX/RX wiring (crossed), and terminal settings.
  • Boot errors: Reflash or replace ROM/SD image; check for corrupt files or incompatible image.
  • Peripherals unresponsive: Confirm correct I/O pin mapping and enablement in firmware/ROM.

Development tools & resources

  • Cross-assemblers: z88dk, sjasmplus, or ASxxxx toolchains.
  • Emulators: MAME, EmuZ80, or project-specific emulators for testing before hardware.
  • Serial terminal apps: PuTTY, minicom, screen.
  • Community forums, GitHub repos, and example code from the dZ80 project page.

Next steps (recommended)

  • Run the included demo and inspect its source.
  • Assemble and run a “Hello, world” in Z80 assembly.
  • Add a small peripheral (LEDs, buttons) to learn memory-mapped I/O.
  • Join community channels to share projects and get help.

If you want, I can write a step-by-step assembly “Hello, world” example or an SD image setup guide tailored to your operating system.

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