The
PET (
Personal
Electronic
Transactor) was a
home/
personal computer produced by
Commodore starting in 1977.
It was a top seller in the Canadian, US, and UK educational markets, and was Commodore's first full-featured computer and would form the basis for their entire
8-bit platform.
History
Origins and the early models
In the 1970s,
Texas Instruments was the main supplier of
CPUs for use in calculators. Many companies sold calculator designs based on their chip sets, including Commodore. However, in 1975 TI increased the price to the point where the chip set alone cost more than what TI sold their entire calculators for, and the industry they had built up was frozen out of the market.
Commodore responded by looking for a chip set of their own they could purchase outright, and quickly found
MOS Technology, Inc. who were bringing their
6502 microprocessor design to market. Along with the company came
Chuck Peddle's
KIM-1 design, a small computer kit based on the 6502. At Commodore, Peddle convinced
Jack Tramiel that calculators were a dead-end. Instead they should focus on making a "real" machine out of the KIM-1, and selling that for much higher profits. Tramiel demanded that Peddle, and Tramiel's son,
Leonard, create a computer in time for the June 1977
Consumer Electronics Show, and gave them six months to do it.
The result was the first all-in-one home computer, the
PET. The first model was the
PET 2001, including either 4 KB (the
2001-4) or 8 KB (
2001-8) of 8-bit
RAM. It was essentially a single-board computer with discrete logic driving a small built-in monochrome monitor with 40×25 character graphics. The machine also included a built-in
Datassette for data storage located on the front of the case, which left little room for the keyboard. The 2001 was announced at the '77 Winter CES in January 1977 and the first 100 units were shipped in mid October 1977. However they remained back-ordered for months, and to ease deliveries they eventually cancelled the 4 kB version early the next year.
Although the machine was fairly successful, there were frequent complaints about the tiny calculator-like keyboard, often referred to as a "
chiclet keyboard" because the keys resembled the popular gum candy.
This was addressed in upgraded "dash N" and "dash B" versions of the 2001, which put the cassette outside the case, and included a much larger keyboard with a full stroke non-click motion.
Internally a newer and simpler motherboard was used, along with an upgrade in memory to 8, 16, or 32 KB, known as the
2001-N-8,
2001-N-16 or
2001-N-32, respectively.
Sales of the newer machines were strong, and Commodore then introduced the models to Europe.
However, there was already a machine called PET for sale in Europe from the huge Dutch
Philips company, and the name had to be changed. The result was the
CBM 3000 series ('CBM' standing for Commodore Business Machines), which included the
3008,
3016 and
3032 models. Like the 2001-N-8, the 3008 was quickly dropped.

PET 2001 (1977)

CBM Model 4032
Education, business, and computer science
The final version of what could be thought of as the "classic" PET was the
PET 4000 series.
This was essentially the later model 2000 series, but with a larger black-and-green monitor and a newer version of
Commodore's BASIC programming language.
By this point Commodore had noticed that many customers were buying the "low memory" versions of the machines and installing their own RAM chips, so the
4008 and
4016 had the sockets punched out of the motherboard.
The
4032 was a huge success in schools, where its tough all-metal construction and all-in-one design made it better able to stand up to the rigors of classroom use.
Just as important in this role was the PET's otherwise underutilized
IEEE 488 port.
Used wisely, the port could be used as a simple
local area network and allowed printers and disk drives (then very expensive) to be shared among all of the machines in the classroom.
Two more machines were released in the PET series.
The
CBM 8000 included a new display chip which drove an 80×25 character screen, but this resulted in a number of software incompatibilities with programs designed for the 40 column screen, and it appears to have been unpopular as a result.
The machine shipped with 32 kB standard as the
8032, but allowed another 64 kB to be added externally.
Later the upgrade was installed from the factory, creating the
8096.
The last in the series was the
SP9000, known as the
SuperPET or
MicroMainframe.
This machine was designed at the
University of Waterloo for teaching programming.
In addition to the basic CBM 8000 hardware, the 9000 added a second
CPU in the form of the
Motorola 6809, more RAM memory and included a number of programming languages including BASIC in
ROM for the 6502 and
APL, COBOL,
FORTRAN,
Pascal and a 6809 assembler on floppies for the 6809.
It also included a terminal program which allowed the machine to be used as a "smart terminal" as well, so this single machine could replace many of the boxes currently in use at the university. Additionally this machine became a remote development environment where the user could later upload their creation to a mainframe after completing development and testing on the SuperPET.
Commodore tried to update the PET line with a new redesign called the
CBM-II series (also known as the B series). These were not as successful and were ultimately abandoned. However, due to demand, the original PET machines were revived and the CBM-II case style was retained. These were known as the
SK's (due to the separated keyboard). They also had a swivel monitor. Originally, standard 8032 boards were retrofitted into these cases. Later the SK models got a new mainboard that already included the 64 kB extension directly on the board and were sold as
8296 or, with a built-in 8250 dual disk drive, as
8296-D.
Although not officially a member of the PET series, in 1983 Commodore packaged C64 motherboards in PET 4000-series cases to create the
Educator 64. This was an attempt to retake some of the education market they had largely lost by then to the
Apple II.
The graphics issue
In the home computer market the line was soon outsold by machines that supported high-resolution color graphics and sound, mainly the
Apple II (introduced later in 1977, the same year as the PET 2001),
Atari 400/800 (1979), and, in particular, Commodore's own bestselling
VIC-20 (1980/81). The mainstream business computer market of the time considered colors and graphics somewhat less of an issue, a view that would change toward the end of the 1980s.
The PET's graphics capabilities were limited to a
character set hardwired in
ROM. On many of the PET range's home computer rivals, the look-up address of the character graphics could be changed and pointed to
RAM, where new characters could be drawn by a programmer to create custom graphics shapes. From a programming point of view, this was a relatively simple method of producing good-looking graphics images, and because of this, as well as the acceptable speed obtainable by a BASIC program moving character objects on the screen compared to bitmap graphics, many programs with a certain amount of graphics, including a fair amount of games, were made this way even on bitmap-capable machines. The PET's lack of the character set remapping feature must therefore be said to constitute a major weakness in the machine's design.
Somewhat offsetting this drawback, the PET's ROM-restricted character set—an ASCII-1963 deviation known as
PETSCII—was one of the most varied and flexible of the era, allowing PET games with rudimentary graphics to be created, exemplified by clones of video games such as
Space Invaders. This flexibility was achieved by the use of two switchable character sets, allowing the choice of either mixed-case characters, or single-case with graphics. Also, this was an era in which many popular
text adventure games did not need graphics at all. For specialized applications, alternative character sets could be programmed into an
EPROM inserted in the character set ROM socket. Alternative character set EPROMs with
diacritics and
mathematical symbols were available in the aftermarket.
Model summary
PET 2001 series / 2001-N & -B series, CBM 3000 series
RAM: 4 or 8 KB / 8, 16, or 32 KB
ROM: 18 KB, including BASIC 1.0 / 20 kB, including BASIC 2.0
Video: discrete TTL video circuit, 9" monochrome monitor, 40×25 character display
Sound: none / single piezo "beeper" (optional external speaker driven by MOS 6522 CB2 pin)
Ports: 2 MOS 6520 PIA, MOS 6522 VIA, 2
Datassette (1 used / 1 on the back), 1 IEEE-488
Notes: 69 key
chiclet keyboard and built-in Datassette / full-sized, full-travel keyboard, no built-in Datassette
PET 4000 series / CBM 8000 series
CPU: MOS 6502, 1 MHz
RAM: 8, 16, or 32 kB / 32 or 96 kB
ROM: 20K, including BASIC 4.0
Video: MOS 6545, 9" or 12" / 12" monochrome monitor, 40×25 / 80×25 character display
Sound: single piezo "beeper"
Ports: 2 MOS 6520 PIA, MOS 6522 VIA, 2 Datassette ports (1 on the back), 1 IEEE-488
Notes: basically an upgraded 2001 / basically a 4000 with 80 columns and slightly different keyboard with smaller (11 key) numeric pad
SuperPET 9000 series
RAM: 96 KB
ROM: 48 KB, including BASIC 4.0 and other programming languages (Waterloo MicroAPL, MicroFORTRAN, MicroBASIC, MicroPascal, MicroCOBOL)
Video: MOS 6545, 12" monochrome monitor, 80×25 character display
Sound: single piezo "beeper" (optional external speaker driven by MOS 6522 CB2 pin)
Ports: MOS 6520 PIA, MOS 6522 VIA, MOS 6551 ACIA, 1 RS-232, 2 Datassette ports (1 on the back), 1 IEEE-488
Notes: basically an 8000 with ROMs for programming languages, it also had three character sets, and an RS-232 for use as a terminal
Peripherals
Commodore Business Machines made a variety of disk drives available for the PET, using the IEEE 488 interface, including:
Commodore 8024 132 collumns printer, friction or traction gear, manessman tally mecanics
Easter Egg
In PET Microsoft Basic ("Upgraded ROM"), typing the command “WAIT 6502,100” will fill the screen with the text "MICROSOFT!"