PROCESSOR TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION
Sol THEORY OF OPERATION SECTION VIII
put pin 5 goes low to clear the first stage. The high on output pin
6 is inverted by NAND gate UIO to supply a low active !STROBE on pin 3
of J1. (Note that J1 on the keyboard connects to J3 on the Sol-PC.)
The next inverted 6 usec clock resets the second U11 stage. We thus
have a 6 usec strobe pulse following the latching of data into U1 and
U2.
The complement of KEY_minus_1 on output pin 8 of U26 is fed
to input pin 10 of NAND gate U16 and is translated to a high on pin
8. The other input on pin 9 is high at this time since it is driven
by the signal which indicates the third count cycle. A three-input
NAND gate, U27, thus has a high on pin 2. A second input on pin 1 is
KEY which is active (high) from the first count cycle of the key clo-
sure. The remaining input on pin 13 is supplied by pin 11 of U16,
and it is low only when the repeat function is operating. U27 is
consequently satisfied and outputs a low on pin 12.
This low appears at pin 5 of NOR gate U16. Pin 4 of U5 is
high at this point by virtue of a low on pin 1 of U16 which indicates
the third count. Thus, the high on pin 6 of U16 will be stored in
the second bit location U20 when !
φ
2 goes low at pin 20 of U20. When
this happens D02 (pin 12) of U20 goes high to indicate the new status
of this bit.
The D02 output is inverted in U10 and applied to input pin 2
of another U26 D flip-flop and to the Capacitance Keyswitch Detector
as PKD. PKD serves to lower the detector threshold; that is, the de-
tector offers less "resistance" to its input. This is positive feed-
back that allows the detector to discriminate between noise and a key
closure. Note that two key closures are required before the detector
threshold is lowered.
The inverted D02 output from U20 also appears at the D input
(pin 2) of U26. Since this flip flop is clocked by !
φ
1, the prior
status of !PKD, called "!PKD_minus_1", is already present in this latch
on output pin 5. If we are on the second count cycle of a key clo-
sure, pin 5 is high. If we are on the third count or more, it is low
to inhibit U25. As previously mentioned, !PKD_minus_1 is also con-
nected to the NOR gate (U16) used to feed data to pin 11 of U20 from
KEY_minus_1.
When the current KEY signal is released, pin 12 of NAND gate
U27 and pin 5 of NAND gate U16 go high. The U16 NAND gate that in-
puts to pin 4 of U16 looks at KEY_minus_1 on pin 2 and the comple-
ment of !PKD_minus_1 on pin 1. Thus, pin 1 is high for the first one
and a half counts and pin 2 is high for the first count. Upon re-
lease of KEY, therefore, pin 3 of U16 is low for the first count.
On the second count, KEY_minus_I goes low--as do pin 6 of U16 and
pin 12 of U20. On the next !
φ
2 clock, the data is read into U20. The
output on pin 12 of U20 changes to remove !PKD which increases the
Capacitance Keyswitch Detector threshold for greater noise immunity.
It also sets !PKD_minus_1 on pin 5 of U26 on the third count cycle
VIII-43
Summary of Contents for Sol-PC
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