I like your MK-52 style resistor network. Why did they want you to do the keys first? Usually it's the board hugging parts first. In any case, it looks like it will be a fun build. :)
cool stuff Mark!... one suggestion id make for the next revision.. rearrange the keys.. so you have 1 to 9 laid out like a normal keypad.. have A-F and 0 around the outside of the numbers..
I did actually think the same when I'd put them all on ... it looked a little bit off the way it is at the moment ... in my humblest of opinions ... but not sure of the best way, considering the additional keys that also need to be squeezed in
Great! Good job! I really liked that you use the Soviet methodology in the project. So it's not for nothing that Soviet books on electronics were useful to you. I look forward to continuing with pleasure .
Great video. Looking forward to the rest of the build.
-- John Hardy
No, no, no ... thank you sir!
I like your MK-52 style resistor network. Why did they want you to do the keys first? Usually it's the board hugging parts first. In any case, it looks like it will be a fun build. :)
Well done, although your Sovietski resistor network-fu needs some work! 😂
"What you imagine it will look like" ... vs ... "What it actually looks like" ...
cool stuff Mark!... one suggestion id make for the next revision.. rearrange the keys.. so you have 1 to 9 laid out like a normal keypad.. have A-F and 0 around the outside of the numbers..
I did actually think the same when I'd put them all on ... it looked a little bit off the way it is at the moment ... in my humblest of opinions ... but not sure of the best way, considering the additional keys that also need to be squeezed in
@@Brfff routing maybe an issue too
"Fix it in software" ... you could "re-arrange" what the keys do in the ROM I guess ...
@@Brfffyeah true dat
Great! Good job! I really liked that you use the Soviet methodology in the project. So it's not for nothing that Soviet books on electronics were useful to you. I look forward to continuing with pleasure .