The Sinclair ZX81 was launched in March 1981 by Sinclair Research Ltd. as the successor to the ZX80. Designed to bring computing to the masses, it was sold in kit form for £49.95 or pre-assembled for £69.95. It featured a Z80-compatible CPU, 1KB RAM (expandable to 16KB and beyond), and connected to a TV for display. Its minimalist, membrane-keyboard design helped reduce costs, while its integrated BASIC interpreter made it accessible for beginners. Despite its limitations, the ZX81 sold over 1.5 million units worldwide, revolutionizing the UK home computing market and paving the way for the ZX Spectrum.
Technical Information | |
---|---|
Name | ZX81 |
Manufacturer | Sinclair Research Ltd |
Launched | Sunday, March 1, 1981 |
Discontinued | 3/1/1982 |
Country | United Kingdom |
CPU | Zilog Z80 (or NEC D780C clone) @ 3.25 MHz |
Power | 9V DC (external PSU, typical draw ~700mA) |
Storage | Cassette tape (300 baud) |
Sound | None (external mods only) |
Keyboard | 40-key membrane keyboard |
Graphics | Character-based with block graphics (no bitmap mode) |
Display | Monochrome TV output (black & white, 24 lines text) |
ROM | 8 KB (includes BASIC interpreter) |
RAM | 1 KB onboard (expandable to 16 KB or more via RAM pack) |
The Joystick Port - The virtual museum of Vintage & Retro computers, peripherals, advertising, software and more.