-
- Transferring data from PcW
- Need new boot discs?
- PCW won't read discs?
- Information on PCW printers
- Programming Information
- PCW's in the land of truth, justice and mom's apple
pie (USA to you!)
- External links
I guess the most often asked question about PCWs is how to get data from
a PCW in Locoscript format to a PC to be edited in a Windows based word
processor.
1) Step one is to convert the Loco format documents to something that
the PC word processor will understand. You do this within Locoscript by
using the Save to ASCII function which will read the Loco document and
write a new copy on your disk with just the text intact - all style
information will be lost.
2) Step two is to get this to a PC. You can get an add-on serial
interface for the PCW for about £50 and try and transfer files across
this way but the process can be fraught with problems and it is far
easier to just contact Locomotive software at Dorking in Surrey and get
their Locolink package that has all the software and cables you need to
do the process.
Yet another advantge of Locolink is that it not only transfers the files
but can convert direct from Loco format to one of a number of popular PC
WP formats all in a single process.
If you've only got one or two disk full's to transfer there are several
companies who offer a disk transfer bureau service that typically costs
about £10 per disk. I'd recommed getting a PCW specific magazine (W H
Smiths) and looking for adverts of companies that provide this
service.
Contact: Locomotive Software, 10 Vincent Works, Vincent Lane, Dorking,
Surrey, RH4 3HJ. Phone: 01306 747 757 - better yet why not get on over
to their web site by clicking here.
As an alternative, phone Mapej on 01691 778659 who can copy all your
LocoScript files and convert them to Word/WordPerfect/AmiPro/etc. on a
PC disk for you. They now have a web site that you can visit by clicking
here.
And yet another alternative is to use "Dave's Disk Doctor Service". You
can contact Dave Smith as daves@diskdoctor.co.uk. Better still, why not
visit his web site by clicking here.
Finally, if you're in the USA read this.
When a PCW is switched on it will just show a blank screen (either green
or white) but won't do much else until a boot disc is inserted. It may
beep to say that it can't find a disc. To start it you need to insert a
"Start of Day" disc and possibly press the [Space] bar on the keyboard
if it doesn't begin to read the disc immediately. As it successfully
reads a boot disc it will show black bars on the screen as each sector
is read and finally you will see the "welcome" message.
There are two possible flavours of "Start of Day" disc that you can
use. Either the dedicated word processing program called Locoscript (the
main "raison d'etre" of the machine) or possibly the generic CP/M
operating system that allows some other programs to be run and allows
disc housekeeping tasks such as disc copying to be performed. If you
have lost these discs you can get new copies from www.locomotive.com. However, if it
is simply that the copies you have aren't being read properly then
consider whether it may just be the following problem causing the
trouble...
Almost without exception the way in which all PCWs finally fail is that
they stop being able to read floppy discs. You may notice this process
starting as more and more discs start to give read errors and "address
mark missing" errors or it may be that the machine is left for a few
months (years?!?) without being switched on then, the next time when you
do switch it on, the screen lights up but when you put in a Locoscript
or CP/M disc the machine just tries to read it and then beeps (rather
than showing the normal pattern of black lines that appear when it
successfully reads the disc).
The reason for this is as simple as a rubber band in the disc drive,
worth less than £1, which has stretched. The band connects the
drive motor to the central disc spindle and, as most PCWs are now more
than 10 years old, it's simply the case that the rubber has perished and
the band has stretched so that the spindle is no longer driven at the
optimum 300rpm but, because of slippage, is running too slow.
The short term fix is simple, just replace the band with an normal
office stationery rubber band of about the right size and thickness (a
bit like using a pair of tights as a car fan belt!) but long term it
would be better to get the proper replacement. There are several
companies who can supply PCW spare parts. Both CPC and Pinboard have
them but it's also worth asking about them on the
news:comp.sys.amstrad.8bit
Usenet newsgroup as there are often people offering them there and,
what's more, the FAQ for that newsgroup also lists details of this
problem and possible remedies/suppliers.
If you are in the USA then the company to contact for anything
to do with the PCW is called Elliam Associates and their contact
details are as follows:
Elliam Associates
PO Box 2664,
Atascadero, CA 93423.
Phone (805) 466-8440.
They deal in all matters PCW and that includes offering a disc/data
transfer service.
Many people ask about using the printer from an old PCW on some other
computer or what is the pinout of the cable (presumably with a view to
using it on another computer or replacing the PCW printer). Well I'm
afraid it's bad news for the following reason....
The PCW printers are not like anything else in the world. Almost all
printers have an intelligent processor inside them that sits on one end
of either a Centronics or RS232 link and receives ASCII character codes
and Esc sequences to be printed or acted upon. Then, inside the
printer, that processor looks up the dot pattern for the character to
be printed in a local ROM then sends control signals to step the drive
motors so many 1/180" (or whatever) and fire pins 2,3,5 and 9 (or
whatever) at exactly the right moment.
The PCW printers are not like this. they have no intelligence (or
extremely minimal) and, instead, all the character forming and motor
timing is done by the Z80 inside the PCW system unit then, what goes up
that cable to the printer, are just the most basic the motor stepping
signals, etc. so there is no way in the world that the PCW printers can
be used on any other kind of computer.
By popular request of the members of the comp.sys.amstrad.8bit
newsgroup I have OCRd the I/O specifiaction for the original PCW and the
text of it is available as a simple text file by clicking this. As it was tricky to do overlining
in a .TXT file any active low signals are shown with an underline
character preceding their name. Also, I actually scanned/OCRd it using a
fax machine (ie 200dpi!) so apologies for any errors however I think the
"meat" of it has come through unscathed.
The information may be freely copied as it is unlikely to change (well
it hasn't in the last 12 years!!) so feel free to take copies for your
own web site, HTML it, add it to your ftp site or just put a pointer to
this file from your own page. The choice is yours.
I did use the text of this document to write the infamous Amstrad User
magazine article about "Roller RAM" which became the basis for a lot of
graphic software that subsequently appeared on the PCW but that's as
far as my understanding of it stretches so you are on your own in
interpreting the majority of the information!
Locomotive's web site - The people who wrote Locoscript!
Pinboard Computers - supply PCW spares/consumables
Trading Post - also supply PCW spares/consumables
SD Microsystems - Company supporting CPC, PCW and PC
PCW Today magazine's web page
Kevin Thacker's Amstrad pages - mainly CPC but some PCW / CP/M.
The Amstrad PCW - quite a good FAQ here.
Ian Macdonald's PCW page - widely respected info.
Jacob Nevins - HTML I/O info and expansion port pinout
Ansible - Information software for PCW
Systeme D - Richard Fairhurst's PCW tech. info.
I'd also highly recommend a look at comp.sys.amstrad.8bit if you
have software that allows you to access news groups. That group is
dedicated to our older computers such as the CPC, PCWs and Notepad.
More details will appear here as I build these pages.
The new PcW!
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