Zenith Z-89
Zenith Z-89
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Zenith Z-89

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Zenith Z-89

The Z-89 is a personal computer introduced in 1979 by Heathkit, but produced primarily by Zenith Data Systems (ZDS) in the early 1980s. It combined an updated version of the Heathkit H8 microcomputer and H19 terminal in a new case that has room for a built-in floppy disk on the right side of the display. Based on the Zilog Z80 microprocessor, it is capable of running CP/M as well as Heathkit's own HDOS.

The Zenith Z-89 is based on the Zilog Z80 microprocessor running at 2.048 MHz, and supports the HDOS and CP/M operating systems. The US$2295 Z-89 is integrated in a terminal-like enclosure with a non-detachable keyboard, 12-inch monochrome CRT with a 80x25 character screen (the 25th line was a special status line), 48 KB RAM, and a 5.25" floppy disk drive (originally hard-sectored with 100 KB storage capacity).

The CRT was available in white or green phosphor versions. Available operating systems were HDOS, CP/M, UCSD Pascal (P-System Pascal), or MP/M.

The keyboard is of high build quality and has an unusual number of special purpose keys: REPEAT, ESC, Tab ↹, CAPS, CTRL, SCROLL, RESET, BREAK, BACK SPACE, LINE FEED, DELETE, and three with white, red, and blue squares. There are five function keys and a numeric keypad. The video display has reverse video and character graphics are available.

The computer has two small card cages inside the cabinet on either side of the CRT, each of which accept up to three Benton Harbor Bus-compatible expansion cards. Upgrade cards available for this included disk controller cards (see below), a 16 KB RAM card that upgrades the standard 48 KB RAM to 64 KB, a RAM memory card accessible as a ramdrive using a special driver (above the Z80's 64 KB memory limit) and a multi-serial card providing extra RS-232 ports. The 2 MHz Z80 could be upgraded to 4 MHz.

In 1979, prior to Zenith's purchase of Heath Company, Heathkit designed and marketed this computer in kit form as the Heath H89, assembled as the WH89, and without the floppy but with a cassette interface card as the H88. (Prior to the Zenith purchase, the Heathkit model numbers did not include the dash).

Heath/Zenith also made a serial terminal, the H19/Z-19, based on the same enclosure (with a blank cover over the diskette drive cut-out) and terminal controller. The company offered an upgrade kit to convert the terminal into a full H89/Z-89 computer.

Another configuration, the Z-90, changes the floppy drive controller from the hard-sectored controller (max 100 kB) to a soft-sectored controller that supports double-sided, double density, 96 tpi drives with a capacity of 640 kB. It also came standard with 64 KB of RAM.

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