Yes, I agree. Interestingly enough, I got most of my manual copies from a pinball site. Most of what I work on now are Z80 things, but I have some 8086 stuff. Rich -- Rich Cini http://www.classiccmp.org/cini http://www.classiccmp.org/altair32 On 8/26/20, 5:22 PM, "vcf-midatlantic on behalf of Ethan Dicks via vcf-midatlantic" <vcf-midatlantic-bounces@lists.vcfed.org on behalf of vcf-midatlantic@lists.vcfed.org> wrote: On Wed, Aug 26, 2020 at 4:51 PM Richard Cini via vcf-midatlantic <vcf-midatlantic@lists.vcfed.org> wrote: > I was looking in the attic for something and a box I thought was empty actually contains a Fluke 9010A debugger with an 8080 pod. I used it for one of my first projects debugging my Altair -- 15 years ago I’m guessing. I thought I sold it, but I guess not Nice! > If anyone has a Z80 or 8086 pod for it, keep me in mind! I'm also looking for a Z80 pod. Mine came with the 68000 pod (we used it for testing/debugging COMBOARDs, but it works great on Amigas!) and I purchased a 6502 pod some years back. I'd love an 1802 pod but those are scarce. Z80 pods are not scarce but because of pinball machines, they aren't cheap. Fantastic tool. I most recently used mine to track down a bad DRAM on a WCS Daughterboard on an Amiga 1000 that was throwing a cyan screen. It was perfect for flipping the WCS write bit and testing WCS RAM. -ethan