Ah yes, some might think that the ZX Spectrum +2 or +3 where the pinnacle of the Sinclair computers, even though they were made by Amstrad. But no, the best ZX Spectrum ever made was the Spectrum+ 128k, lovingly known by fans as the "Toastrack" due to the heat-sink. It didn't have the best keyboard, the +2/+3 had those, neither did it have a built in (world's cheapest and nastiest) cassette tape or disk drive. But what it did have, was more compatibility with peripherals and software.
You see, back when I was a kid, before I got a +3, I always wanted a Microdrive but they were too expensive. Looking back, it's just as well I never got one, they were unreliable and limited in capacity to about 90K. Actually, they started out in the 85K region and as the tape stretched would fit more data on them each time they got reformatted.
Of course, then was then and now is now, and now I have an Interface 1 and two Microdrives, plus a load of carts to go with them. The thing is, the Microdrive was such a pricey unreliable disaster for Sinclair, they died out rather quickly, along with the Sinclair QL that also used them. Yeah, I have one of those too, but I digress.
So because not many people released any software on a Microdrive, and one cart couldn't even hold the memory of a 128K Spectrum, when Amstrad redesigned the machine with the grey +2, they made it completely incompatible with the Interface 1 and a lot of other stuff as well.
Now I also have a Commodore 1084S monitor, well two actually but let's not get into that. So I ordered a cable off Ebay from a good seller that I've had cables from before, to connect my 128k/+2/+3s to it. The cable worked great, well once I removed an extra resistor off of it anyway.
But what wasn't so great was my 128k, it needed some helping hands to get it into tip top shape. Age has not been the enemy in this case, bad design on the part of Sinclair was. As shipped, this unit has a number of problems, one of which may have been fixed in a later revision, one that was definitely fixed on the +2/+3 units, and one that was never fixed.
Firstly, those who love the Speccy will know that it offered a selection of 8 colours, in two different brightnesses. So you effectively got a 16 colour machine, even if half of them weren't quite so distinct. Nothing shows them more obviously than the built in test pattern you can see by resetting the machine with the Break key held down.
Only, on the monitor output, the brightness level is carried on a different pin, not combined as it should have been with each of the R, G, B signals. So first job is to take the computer apart, a lot easier in those days than now, and cut a few tracks and rewire things so the brightness signal is correctly added to each colour line. This is pretty easy to do, and just takes some simple soldering of wires, diodes and resistors.
This document covers all you need to know, and a lot more besides. I found things where just perfect with just one diode and 150ohm resistor between the bright line and each of the signal lines. No need to add an additional 150ohm resistor onto the signal line after that, in fact doing so made things darker! Obviously if you are doing this to another monitor other than the 1084S, or to a SCART socket then you might want to add that bit back in.
So, brightness output all nicely fixed, the next thing I had to do was route audio to what used to be the Bright pin of the RGB socket. This is because the +2/+3 and cable I bought off ebay expect audio on this pin, and I'd already cut it anyway, so I just needed to route the audio signal from the Mic socket through to this. One wire for that, job done.
[url="http://www.myreviewer.com/default.asp?a=144467"]
That's two out of three things fixed, and the third was possibly the most time consuming, simply because it took me ages to get hold of the info I needed on the 128k ULA pin outs, and trace everything around the motherboard. You see Sinclair made a design error with the audio on at the very least the early toastracks. The 48k beeper was a heck of a lot louder than the new AY sound chip, so any game that used both audio devices (and many did) didn't sound good at all.
Take Robocop, which was typical of the day, it used the beeper for gun effects, and the AY chip for music. On my toastrack, you could barely hear the music. Then there is the wonderful Tim Follin classic Agent X II theme tune, which used the beeper to simulate a multi-channel synthesiser, and the AY chip for drums. On mine, you could barely hear the drums. ![]()

So anyway, after spending ages tracing the pins of the AY chip, which outputs each channel on a different pin (useful if you want to reroute the output and make it stereo, which people have), and then following where the beeper output goes from the ULA (which is hilariously directly connected to the input, which is why you can hear games loading), I managed to work out how things were connected and that there was a resistor (R115 to the left of the ULA if you want to follow along at home) which drops down the level of the combined AY output.
I played with various values whilst running a short basic program that beeped alternately on the beeper and AY, yes that got irritating after a few minutes. Anyway in the end no resistor at all on R115 seemed to be pretty close, although putting a dB meter app on my iPhone still showed the AY as fractionally quieter.
(A quick thanks to gasman on the World of Spectrum forums for correcting me on the AY output also being a square wave!)
Anyways, if you have the same problem, just replace R115 with a bit of wire, it's more than close enough!
So, all of that modified, and I now have the best Spectrum ever! Well, unless you start adding modern technology like an IDE interface (yes they exist) but that just takes things too far away from that era for my liking. I want to play classic Speccy games on original hardware as nature, or at least Sinclair, intended.
Oh, I probably forgot to mention I bought a little mono 9V amplifier off ebay, for loading games more reliably. Other than that, nothing I've done to this kit couldn't have been done easily enough back in the day, so doing all of this doesn't feel remotely dirty.
I also may have converted my +2 to take an external tape input, but due to cheap design by Amstrad, it will only work if you disconnect the internal tape drive. So I need to sort out some relay powered off the motor to only connect that when it's running. A project for another day. ![]()
Posted by Robert John Shepherd
Page 1 Page 2 There is no justice in the world. But then anyone who has been watching the lowlifes go on a rampage looting London, will already know that. TV can often reflect true life, to varying degrees of success and enjoyment, and sometimes the industry that is TV does too.
This season, we saw a few SciFi series from the US, one of which was the tiresome predictable and really quite a let down that was V finally which got cancelled after it's second run. I'm not quite sure it deserved to get that far, but it did. Yes, I watched it anyway, even though it was bad, I quite like some of the cast so that compelled me to continue with it.
Also cancelled, was the fantastic series hybrid The Event, which had a rocky start but soon evolved into a really exciting combination of 24 style action and, er, some show involving aliens, perhaps Roswell? Anyway, week in week out this got stronger and stronger, and I'd even recommend a watch knowing that the cliff hanger finale will leave you hanging off the cliff.
And then we get to Falling Skies, the Steven Spielberg produced SciFi series in which the aliens have already wiped out most of the planet, and the humans are fighting back. As a scenario there is so much you could do with this, so many avenues to explore, this could have been so good, so so good.
Renewed for a second season after only a few episodes, this one lives on, completely without merit. This is truly one of the most benign, dreary, dull, predictable, stereotypical, badly acted, badly written, cheap looking shows on television. I wish I'd never started watching it, because as I may have hinted at before, once I start something, no matter how awful it might be, I can't help carrying on sometimes.
So what's wrong with this supposedly epic tale of man vs alien? Where to start, Noah Wyle, so perfect in ER, is completely mis-cast here and acts as a leader nobody would follow unless payed to. I don't care that he is playing a history teacher, perhaps he's playing one very well, which makes the script laughable that people would follow him in such a time of crisis.
Talking of crisis, things can't be that bad because everyone always looks so washed and clean, the women flawless, the men incredibly well groomed. I find it personally very re-assuring that when the poo hits the fan in the future, hairdressers and beauty therapists are going to survive, and then spend their time making sure everyone looks their best rather than shooting things. Oh and despite rarely seeing one, there must be a secret stash of baths somewhere in that school they holed themselves up in for most of the season.
Next Page
Posted by Robert John Shepherd
Page 1 Page 2 
My rig is quite good, I have a Quad Core CPU, and an nVidia Geforce 570 GTX, it's capable of most brand new games maxed out at 1920x1080. Sure, I really enjoyed Crysis 2 on it, but the last few months I've had an insane amount of fun playing stuff which is definitely not new, or cutting edge, or even remotely pushes my system. And all of it incredibly cheaply.
Now when I say cheap, you may be thinking I'm playing old adventure games from Lucasarts that were born to run under DOS, but you'd be wrong. I'm talking here about very modern games with ridiculous hours of enjoyment, and graphics that are up there with the best PS3 and Xbox 360 stuff has to offer.
The simple fact of the matter is, games budgets for the last three or four years have been huge, and any major title you pick up in this period is going to look good and run nicely. So if you are prepared to accept playing something the Internet and your friends aren't currently all going on about, you can have an insane amount of fun on very little outlay.
What I've Bought This Year
So yes, I payed for Portal 2 and Crysis 2, which were both excellent games that have given me quite a few hours of pleasure. However, thanks to Steam and their various sales and other time limited deals which are always worth watching out for, I've actually spent a lot more time playing other things which cost a heck of a lot less.
One of the first things I bought this year were Supreme Commander 2, the sequel to my favourite RTS game of all time. I got this in January for £2.49. Yes, that's right, for the price of a few chocolate bars I got a game that has a fair few hours of single player enjoyment, combined with many many many more hours of multiplayer fun. At least I hope so, because the chap I RTS with had to wait until a few weeks ago before he picked it up on sale, so we haven't really tried it yet.
Okay, maybe a bad example, but what perhaps isn't is the fact you can buy the original Supreme Commander and the Forged Alliance sequel together on places like Amazon for a mere £5. If you like a challenging RTS which demands you balance resources with strategy, especially if you remember how fantastic Total Annihilation was, then go get this now and you won't be disappointed. If you can get a friend into it as well, you'll have many hundreds of hours fun for such a tiny outlay.
At the same time I got SupCom2, I also bought the Lucasarts Jedi Knight bundle. I do like these old classic games, and despite having owned one of the games from this series already, I couldn't resist getting a pack that included Star Wars: Dark Forces, Jedi Knight, Jedi Knight II, Jedi Knight: Mysteries of the Sith and Jedi Academy, for £3.75. Yes, that is 5 games for under £4!!
These old games are classics and certainly should keep me occupied for a few hours when I'm somewhere with my laptop. Probably the same reason I later bought Quake, Quake II, Quake 3, and a bunch of mission packs for each of them, costing £4.24.
So there we go, that's a barrel load of fun right there, and only £10.48 spent so far. However, I appreciate that SupCom2 aside, these are really old games that whilst fun, could get you laughed at by your XBox owning friends, so let's move on to some that won't.
Next Page
Posted by Robert John Shepherd
I just realised that I forgot to mention Wings of Prey, something else I bought cheap on Steam.
I'll be dogfighting on that just as soon as I can get this spare joystick round to Uncle Barry.