- 1. Overview
- 2. Etymology
- 3. Cultural Impact
Komputer 2086
Unipolbrit Komputer 2086
Type Home computer
Release date 1986; 39 years ago (1986) Introductory price 190000 zŠMedia Cassette tapes
, 31â2-inch floppy disks
, 5
⢠1â4-inch floppy disks, ROM Cartridges Operating system
Sinclair BASIC
with Timex Computer
Corp. extension CPU
Zilog Z80
A @ 3.58 MHz Memory 48 KiB
Display PAL TV or video monitor; text: 32Ă24 lines, 16 colours; graphics: 256Ă192, 16 colours or 512Ă192 pixels, two colours; attributes: 32x24 or 32x192, two colours per area. Graphics Timex SCLD Sound Beeper, AY-3-8912
Input Keyboard
Predecessor Timex Computer 2048
Successor Timex Computer 3256
The machine was marketed as a lowâcost entry point for Polish households eager to join the burgeoning homeâcomputer revolution of the midâ1980s. Its price of roughly 190âŻ000âŻzĹ placed it in the same bracket as other budget machines, yet the inclusion of a builtâin ROM cartridge slot and a robust Keyboard set it apart from many contemporaries that relied on external peripherals for extended functionality.
Technical specifications
CPU
⢠Zilog Z80A @ 3.50 MHz
The central processing unit was a slightly underâclocked variant of the classic Zilog Z80, running at 3.50âŻMHz. This clock speed was deliberately chosen to balance performance with power consumption, allowing the system to operate for extended periods on modest electricity budgets while still being compatible with a vast library of existing Z80 software.
ROM
⢠16 KiB
Sixteen kilobytes of readâonly memory stored the firmware that initialized the hardware, managed the cassette interface, and housed the builtâin Sinclair BASIC interpreter. The relatively small ROM size contributed to the machineâs low production cost and rapid boot times, though it also imposed limits on the complexity of builtâin features.
RAM
⢠48 KiB
Fortyâeight kilobytes of randomâaccess memory provided the working storage for user programs, data, and graphics buffers. This amount of memory was typical for home computers of the era, enabling simple applications and games while requiring careful memoryâmanagement from developers.
Display
⢠Timex SCLD chip [14] [15] [16] with Extended Color, Dual Screen and High Resolution screen modes
:
⢠Text: 32Ă24 characters (8Ă8 pixels, rendered in graphics mode)
⢠Graphics: 256Ă192 pixels, 15 colours (two simultaneous colours - “attributes” - per 8Ă8 pixels, causing attribute clash)
⢠Extended Color: 256Ă192 pixels, 15 colors with colour resolution of 32Ă192 (two simultaneous colours - “attributes” - per 8x1 pixels)
⢠Dual Screen: (two 256Ă192 pixels screens can be placed in memory)
⢠High Resolution: 512Ă192 mode with 2 colours (Four palettes: Black & White, Blue & Yellow, Red & Cyan, Magenta & Green).
The display subsystem, built around the Timex SCLD chip, offered a richer palette and more flexible screen handling than the original ZX Spectrum, thanks to its extended colour capabilities and dualâscreen architecture. Attribute clash, a hallmark of early Spectrum graphics, persisted but could be mitigated through clever palette swapping and mode selection.
Sound
⢠Beeper (1 channel, 10 octaves and 10+ semitones via internal speaker) and AY-3-8912
PSG (three channels)
Audio output was generated by a simple beeper capable of producing a wide range of tones, supplemented by the AYâ3â8912 programmable sound chip, which provided three independent channels for more melodic possibilities. This combination gave the machine a distinctive auditory character that many programmers exploited for background music and sound effects.
I/O
⢠Line audio in/out for external cassette tape storage
⢠RF
television out
⢠DIN
Composite
monitor out
⢠Kempston Joystick
input
⢠Cartridge
port
⢠Centronics
printer port.
The inputâoutput panel combined traditional cassette I/O for program loading with modern video output options, allowing the computer to be connected directly to a television set or a dedicated monitor. The inclusion of a Kempstonâcompatible joystick port made it easy to attach popular gaming peripherals, while the cartridge slot opened the door to software distribution via ROM cartridges.
Storage
⢠External cassette tape recorder
⢠External 5" 1/4 or 3" disc drives
Although the base model relied on external cassette recorders for program storage, optional external disc drives were available, providing faster load times and larger storage capacity for more ambitious software projects.
Keyboard
⢠Mechanical keyboard: 42 keys, five function keys
, cursor keys
The keyboard featured a durable mechanical construction with fortyâtwo keys, including five programmable function keys and a full set of cursor controls. Its tactile feel was reminiscent of contemporary office keyboards, offering a satisfying typing experience that suited both programming and productivity tasks.
Gallery
The following images illustrate various configurations and peripheral attachments of the Unipolbrit KomputerâŻ2086.
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Unipolbrit 2086.
See also
⢠Elwro 800 Junior
Notes
⢠^ Unipolbrit is a portmanteau word of Uni , from Unimor company and Polbrit company (which itself is pol , from Poland and brit from United_Kingdom ). The number 86 in 2086 is from the last two digits of the year of the production start.
⢠^ “Unipolbrit Komputer 2086”. Kio’s Sinclair ZX Computers Archive . Retrieved 2022-11-21.
⢠^
⢠Adamski, Jarek (2009). “Unipolbrit Komputer 2086”. 8bit Projects For Everyone . Retrieved 2022-11-21. [ permanent dead link ]
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⢠“Unipolbrit Komputer 2086”. MCbx Old Computer Collection . Retrieved 2022-11-21.
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⢠“Unipolbrit 2086”. Moja kolekcja starych komputerĂłw (in Polish). Retrieved 2022-11-21.
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⢠Programowanie mikrokomputera Unipolbrit 2086 w jÄzyku BASIC (in Polish). Biuro Wydawnicze ZZDZ.
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⢠“Unipolbrit 2086”. Dziennik MiĹoĹnika Polskich KomputerĂłw . 2010. Archived from the original on 2012-02-09. Retrieved 2023-01-29. {{cite web }} : CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link )
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⢠“Sinclair Clones - Unipolbrit Komputer 2086”. Sinclair Nostalgia Products . Retrieved 2022-11-21.
⢠^
⢠“Polish Computers - Unipolbrit 2086”. Museum of Games and Computers of the Past . Retrieved 2023-02-02.
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⢠Walgenbach, Stefan. “Polish Home-Computer: Unipolbrit Komputer 2086”. HCM: East-European Home-Computer . Retrieved 2012-07-14.
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⢠Boatwright, Jack (2003). “Information on all Timex/Sinclair computers”. TIMEX Sinclair Showcase . Retrieved 2020-10-12.
⢠^
⢠Red, Johnny (2001). “Unipolbrit Komputer 2086”. TIMEX Computer World . Retrieved 2012-07-14.
⢠^
⢠Florindo, Bruno. “CIRCE - AMERICAN COUSINS” (PDF). Byte High No Limit (22): 64. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-06-07. Retrieved 2023-01-28.
⢠^
⢠“SCLD Chip”. Timex/Sinclair - The Authoritative Website for Timex/Sinclair Computers . Retrieved 2023-01-27.
⢠^
⢠“Scld in spectrusty::chip::scld - Rust”. docs.rs . Retrieved 2023-01-27.
External links
⢠Komputer 2086 at HCM. Accessed on April 5, 2008.
⢠Timex Computer World UK2086 page
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Article:
Sinclair computers, derivatives, and clones
Sinclair Research /
Science of Cambridge
⢠MK14
⢠ZX80
⢠ZX81
⢠ZX Spectrum (ZX Spectrum+ , ZX Spectrum 128 )
⢠QL
⢠ZX Spectrum +2
⢠ZX Spectrum +3
Licensed systems
⢠ZX Spectrum Vega
⢠T/S 1000
⢠T/S 1500
⢠T/S 2068 (TC 2068)
⢠TC 2048
⢠TC 3256
⢠Z88
Lists of clones
⢠ZX80/81 clones
⢠QL clones
Compatible or
related systems
⢠ZX80 based: MicroAce , TK80 , TK82 , NE-Z80
⢠ZX81 based: Apply 300 , AS-1000 , Lambda 8300 , CP-200 , CZ 1000 , CZ 1500 , CZ 1000 plus , CZ 1500 plus , NE-Z8000 , Ringo R-470 , TK82C , TK83 , TK85
⢠ZX Spectrum based: ATM , Pentagon , CZ 2000 , CZ Spectrum , CZ Spectrum plus , Didaktik , Dubna 48K , Hobbit , Scorpion ZS-256 , Sprinter , Kay 1024 , Komputer 2086 , TK90X , TK95 , Robik , ZX Spectrum Next , ZX Touch
⢠QL based: CST Thor , One Per Desk , Q40/Q60
⢠Other: SAM CoupÊ , Jupiter Ace
Sinclair Research peripherals
⢠ZX Printer
⢠ZX Interface 1
⢠ZX Interface 2
⢠ZX Microdrive
Timex peripherals
⢠TS2040 Printer
⢠TS2050 Modem
⢠FDD Disk Drive
Other peripherals
⢠DISCiPLE
⢠MB02
⢠Multiface
⢠Kempston
⢠Currah
⢠SpecDrum
People
⢠Clive Sinclair
⢠John Pemberton
⢠Rick Dickinson
⢠Steve Vickers
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