Reference machines
From SpecNext official Wiki
Reference Machines
The Spectrum Next is based on five reference machines:
- ZX Spectrum 16k: The cut-down version of the original Spectrum. Has no memory after $7fff, so all memory is contended. Not simulated by the Next since the 48k version is identical but has more memory.
- ZX Spectrum 48k: The original Spectrum. Does not support memory remapping.
- ZX Spectrum 128k: The first enhanced Spectrum made by Sinclair. Supports memory remapping and the shadow screen.
- ZX Spectrum +2A/+3: The enhanced Spectrums after Amstrad rebranding. This is also the "native" personality of the next.
- Pentagon: A Russion-made homebrew Spectrum that eliminated contended memory and doubled the clock speed.
Video Timing
The video timing of the Next is determined by four factors:
- The video timing of the reference machine selected by the config personality (readable at Machine Type Register ($03))
- The frame rate, 50hz or 60hz (readable from Peripheral 1 Register ($05)). This can be freely adjusted except that the Pentagon can only run at 50Hz.
- The configured video output type, VGA or HDMI (readable from Video Timing Register ($11)). If HDMI is selected, the video timing of the selected machine type is completely overridden, so this is considered an alternative machine type below, although not by the Next firmware (which means that if Pentagon is selected, a 60Hz frame rate can be chosen if the output type is HDMI)
The video output is divided into four phases, starting from the first line of the addressable screen (not the top left corner of the whole screen, which is part of the border):
- The actual display is 192 lines in all configurations.
- The bottom border is 57 lines at 50Hz or 33 at 60Hz on standard machines; on the Pentagon, it is slightly smaller, 49 lines. On HDMI, it is 40 lines at 50Hz or 20 at 60Hz.
- The vertical blanking period is the time taken for the drawing line on CRT monitors to return from the bottom of the screen to the top, which is simulated on modern non-CRT monitors. It is determined entirely by video output standard: 14 lines on VGA, and 40 or 33 lines on HDMI depending on the frame rate.
- The ULA VBLANK Interrupt is the point at which the ULA sends an interrupt to the Z80 causing it to wake from HALT instructions and run the frame service routine. On all non-HDMI machines, this happens immediately before the blanking period begins, except for Pentagon where it happens 1 line earlier. On HDMI, because of the longer blanking period, it happens during the blanking period rather than before. At 50Hz, it happens 25 lines into the blanking period, leaving 15 lines between the interrupt and the actual start of the top border (close to the 14 lines it would be on VGA output). At 60Hz, it happens 24 lines into blanking, leaving only 9 lines.
- The top border is 49 lines at 50hz or 23 lines at 60Hz on 48k Spectrum; on 128k Spectrum, it is exactly one line shorter at both frame rates. On Pentagon, it's substantially longer, 65 lines. On HDMI, it's 40 lines at 50Hz and 17 at 60Hz.
Machine | Frame Rate | Output | Total output lines | Display lines | Bottom border lines | Blanking period lines | Top border lines | Total non-display lines | ULA interrupt timing |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Spectrum 48k | 50Hz | VGA | 312 | 192 | 57 | 14 | 49 | 120 | 1 line before blanking |
Spectrum 128k, +2A, +3 | 50Hz | VGA | 311 | 192 | 57 | 14 | 48 | 119 | 1 line before blanking |
Pentagon | 50Hz | VGA | 320 | 192 | 49 | 14 | 65 | 128 | 2 lines before blanking |
Spectrum 48k | 60Hz | VGA | 262 | 192 | 33 | 14 | 23 | 70 | 1 line before blanking |
Spectrum 128k, +2A, +3 | 60Hz | VGA | 261 | 192 | 33 | 14 | 22 | 69 | 1 line before blanking |
Any | 50Hz | HDMI | 312 | 192 | 40 | 40 | 40 | 120 | 25 lines into blanking |
Any | 60Hz | HDMI | 262 | 192 | 20 | 33 | 17 | 70 | 24 lines into blanking |