A Timex/Sinclair Gathering at the Vintage Computer Festival Midwest 20

What began as an off-hand comment about showing some of our favorite computers at the 20th Vintage Computer Festival Midwest turned into a semi-coordinated group display and weekend of fun for more than a dozen members of the Timex Sinclair Online User Group.

Among those who attended:

And new members we met at the show:

Friday

Jeff Burrell arrived early on Friday and claimed our spaces, at the corner of an island. Jeff set up his display about the TS-2060 project (more below). Several other members arrived early and we spent part of the evening setting up everything for the show the next day.

Evan Wright, who was there to present his text adventure development systems Lantern!, dropped by to say hi. Turns out, Evan was a Sinclair user from way back!

After getting everything set up, we had a great dinner together at the hotel restaurant.

Saturday

Saturday was a whirlwind, crazy busy day: several folks finished setting up their displays while the line of people waiting to get into the hall grew increasingly longer outside. When the doors opened, it was packed very quickly.

We had a lot of visitors stop by to check out our displays and ask questions. We explored the other exhibits and spotted a few Sinclair and Timex/Sinclair computers at other tables, including another example of the NEI educational suitcase.

Ryan took the opportunity to live-code fixes to his TS Commander, a file navigation/program launcher for the TS-Pico, and to show off his “Thief!” game.

Saturday night, 24 of us went to Lou Malnatti’s for pizza and fun.

Back row: Ethan and Mark Martin, Jeff Fetta, Michael and Ingo Schmied, Evan Wright, Mariah and Peyton Bratton.
Next row: Susan Newfeld, Joe Vandezande, Jeff and Jeff Burrell (son and father), Ryan Gray, Jeff Kuhlmann.
Front row: Steward Newfeld, David Green, David Anderson, Adam Trionfo, Greg and Brad Bennett.
Special guest on the right: Tim Horner.

Sunday

Sunday was the last day of the show and it was a little less hectic. We still had plenty of visitors checking out our displays and learning more about our projects.

Carl Miles gave a presentation on the history Sinclair and Timex/Sinclair computers, from the ZX80 up to The Spectrum. It was the last presentation of the day and was well attended.

We went off to dinner in smaller groups but reconvened later in the evening at the hotel’s bar. David introduced those who came to the Chicago tradition of Malort. Everyone survived and we had a great time hanging out together one last time.

A toast to friendship.

Displays

Carl Miles

Carl showed off the recreated and improved Timex Sinclair 1510 that he and Ryan have been working on, as well as what Carl is calling the “1068,” a souped-up version of the 1000 with a built-in Wespi, configurable joystick port, loads of RAM and more features. One of Carl’s computers, a recreation of the original proposal for the TS 1500 (a 1000 with 16K housed in a silver 1000 case) was running the Timex Store Demonstrator ROM. Carl also had his The Spectrum on display.

David Green

David loves to build expansion devices, ROM cartridges and other little open systems but ends up with more instances of each than he can possibly use because most PCB houses have a minimum order of 5 PCBs. So David was selling his excess at VCFMW.

He also had 3D printed replica ZX80 and ZX81 cases and PCBs available.

Mark Martin

Mark is a big Sinclair QL fan: showed off several varieties of the Sinclair QL. He had an original QL available, which he opened to show the inside. He also had more modern QL systems like the Q40 and Q68.

Stewart Newfeld/Zebra Systems

Stewart, a long-time supporter of the Timex/Sinclair community through his company Zebra Systems, showed his NOS books, tapes, Alphacom printers, as well as his newer products, like a microswitch keyboard and a composite output video board for the TS1000/ZX81.

Jeff Kuhlmann

Jeff showed his work-in-progress Baudot keyboard that he plans to interface to a TS 2068. Baudot code was a 5 bit character encoding, originally developed for telegraphy.

Tim Horner

Tim made the 8,000 mile trek from New Zealand to hang out with his Timex/Sinclair friends. Tim showed off his cross-translating board that lets you connect a PC keyboard to a ZX81/TS1000, which he used with his custom keycap keyboard.

Jeff Fetta

Jeff displayed his compact-flash storage system for the ZX81/TS1000 that includes a custom ROM to support loading/saving to a CF device, along with his recreation of the Zon-X AY-3-8912-based sound board.

Jeff Burrell

Jeff showed off the Timex community re-imagined/updated version of the Timex/Sinclair 2060 Bus Expansion Unit. This device includes multiple video modes via its built-in FPGA, a Raspberry Pi Pico 2, real-time clock, serial and USB ports, stereo DAC, and more. When it’s finished, it’ll have a 3D printed enclosure that the TS 2068 plugs into, like the original Bus Expansion Unit.

David Anderson

David brought several Timex/Sinclair 2068s and a Timex/Sinclair 1000, along with books and other display elements for the show.

One of the Timex/Sinclair 2068s was displayed with the TS-Pico storage device, PicoVideo board and Tim Horner’s ZX Printer board. Another 2068, signed by Gary Grimes, was displayed along with Gary’s industrial design drawings he made while working on the 2068 project.

The Timex/Sinclair 1000 was inside a K2 Kradle, a keyboard/memory/device expansion made for the ZX81/TS1000 that included 64K RAM and serial and parallel port options. Attached to the 1000 was a Wespi, which has a fast loader, stores many files and has its own menuing system and a web browser for loading files on to the device.

Ingo Schmied

Ingo showed off his Kilozed project, a project he and his brother Michael have been working on for several years. It includes a full-sized keyboard, larger case with openable top and numerous enhancements to the ZX81/TS1000 used in it.

The Albuquerque Club

David Anderson, Adam Trionfo, Carl Miles, and Ryan Gray. Adam, Carl and Ryan travelled from Albuquerque, NM, to attend.
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