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SixtyClone Bare-Board Project

From RetroTechCollection
SixtyClone โ€œBare-Boardโ€ Project
Caption Green-solder-mask SixtyClone 250407 replica PCB (rev b)
Type Drop-in replica Commodore 64 mainboard (bare PCB only)
Designer โ€œBobโ€™s Bitsโ€ community project (lead: Rob Taylor)
contributors incl. Jim Drew, Leif Bloomquist & C64 enthusiasts world-wide
Manufacturer Unknown
First released late 2016 (initial 250407 gerbers uploaded)
Latest revision rev E gerber set (2022) โ€“ 250407, 250466 & 250469 variants
Operating voltage โ€”
Layers / PCB 4-layer FR-4, ENIG finish, gold fingers
Compatibility 100 % electrical* with original C64 ICs & shields
(*one bodge wire on early rev A to route VIC /ฮฆ0)
Features โ€ข modern 4-layer impedance control
โ€ข enlarged silkscreen legends & test-pads
โ€ข optional dual-kernal footprints + JiffyDOS jumper
โ€ข consolidated decoupling network & โ€œsilk-BOMโ€ printing
Model No. SixtyClone-250407 / -250466 / -250469

The SixtyClone bare-board project is an open-hardware effort to recreate every major revision of the Commodore 64 logic board as brand-new, professionally-fabricated PCBs. Designed so that hobbyists can transplant the original MOS/CSG chips from a corroded or broken donor machine into a fresh board, SixtyClone provides a legal, royalty-free alternative to scavenging vintage hardware. The gerbers (and KiCad sources for recent revisions) are released under a permissive licence; commercial runs are sold via Bobโ€™s Bits on Tindie and by several regional group-buys.

๐ŸŽฏ Project goals

  • One-to-one electrical compatibility โ€“ keep every trace, pad and via placement true to Commodoreโ€™s own artwork so that RF shields, heatsinks and cartridges still fit.
  • Manufacturability upgrades โ€“ convert the 1980s 2-layer stack-up into a modern 4-layer with internal ground/power planes which greatly reduce crosstalk and audible VIC โ€œjail-barsโ€.
  • Usability improvements โ€“ large white silkscreen labels (including capacitor values) double as a printed Bill-of-Materials; mounting hole diameters match todayโ€™s metric M3 hardware.
  • Educational licence โ€“ gerbers are free for personal use, encouraging new builders to learn through-hole soldering while preserving classic computers.

๐Ÿ› ๏ธ Supported C64 revisions

SixtyClone variant Original Commodore PCB Key differences / notes
SC-250407 โ€œlong-boardโ€ breadbin (1983-85) Most common donor; retains separate 6581 SID & 12 V rail
SC-250466 late breadbin (1986) Two 4464 DRAMs, 8562/8565 VIC, color RAM integrated in PLA
SC-250469 short-board / 64C (1987-92) HMOS chips, 9 V SID supply; optional pads for dual-kernal switch

Early SixtyClone rev A boards required a bodge wire between VIC pin 38 and the CPU ฯ•0 trace; this was fixed in rev B and later.

๐Ÿ”ฉ Bill-of-materials overview

Because SixtyClone is just the PCB, builders must source every through-hole component:

  • 21ร— logic ICs (74LSxx), 16ร— passives, crystal & can oscillator
  • PLA, CPU 6510/8500, VIC-II, SID, two CIAs โ€“ taken from a donor or aftermarket replacements
  • three linear regulators & heat-sinks (250407 only)
  • 4700 ยตF + 1000 ยตF axial electrolytics (footprints accept radial if leads are bent)
  • DIN keyboard, cassette & power connectors โ€“ modern CUI / Cliff equivalents fit the footprint

A colour-coded silk-screen value is printed beside every capacitor and resistor to speed hand assembly. Detailed spreadsheets, Digikey/Mouser links and pick-lists are maintained in the project GitHub wiki.

โš™๏ธ Assembly tips

  1. Wash & dry the PCB to remove fabrication flux; ENIG finish is already tinned.
  2. Install low-profile parts first (res-networks, jumpers, resistors) followed by sockets and electrolytics.
  3. Tin the stitched-via grounds under each TO-220 regulator (250407) before mounting the heatsink to guarantee low-impedance bonding.
  4. Perform continuity checks on the 5 V and ground planes *before* inserting irreplaceable MOS chips.
  5. Recommended to pair the build with a modern โ€œC64 Saverโ€ PSU protector when first power-up.

๐Ÿ” Known issues

  • SID audio hum โ€“ greatly reduced versus original boards but still audible on high-gain amplifiers; adding a ground-lift plane under the audio path (rev E experimental) lowers the noise a further 3 dB.
  • Keyboard bracket height โ€“ certain aftermarket metal keyboard braces foul the cassette port shield; trimming 1 mm from the bracket front edge resolves the clash.
  • Case LEDs โ€“ early silkscreen marked +/- backwards; always verify polarity before soldering.

๐Ÿ“œ Licensing

Gerber and schematic files are released under Creative Commons BY-SA 4.0. Commercial resale of finished boards is permitted provided attribution remains on the silk-screen and in accompanying documentation.

๐Ÿ›’ Availability

  • Tindie storefront โ€œBobโ€™s Bits โ€“ Commodore 64 replica PCBsโ€ โ€“ sells 250407 & 250469 boards in green, blue and black solder-mask, typically US $29 โ€“ $35 each.
  • Group-buys on r/c64 and Amibay several times per year, often bundled with complete BOM kits.