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The Z-89 was a personal computer produced by Zenith Data Systems in the early 1980s. It was based on the Zilog Z80 microprocessor and ran the HDOS and CP/M operating systems. The Z-89 was integrated in a terminal-like enclosure with a non-detachable keyboard, 12-inch black/white CRT, hard-sectored controller, and a 5.25" diskette drive. In 1979, prior to Zenith's purchase of Heathkit, Heathkit had originally designed and marketed this computer in kit form as the H89, assembled as the WH89, and without the floppy but with a cassette interface card as the H88. (Note: Prior to the Zenith purchase, the Heathkit model numbers did not include the - 'dash') Heath/Zenith also made a serial terminal, the H/Z-19, based on the same enclosure (with a blank cover over the diskette drive cut-out) and terminal controller. They even offered an upgrade kit to convert the terminal into a full H/Z-89 computer. Another configuration, the Z-90, changed the floppy drive controller from the hard-sectored controller (max 100 kB) to a soft-sectored controller that supported double-sided, double density, 96 tpi drives with a capacity of 640 KiB. It also came standard with 64 KiB of RAM. There were several external drive systems available for the H/Z-89.
A maximum of two disk controller cards could be installed in a standard system. Summary
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