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               Tandy 1000EX & 1000HX hard drives and peripherals
                                  Will Baldwin
                                January 14, 1995

              I have owned a Tandy 1000HX since about 1989.  It
          replaced the 1000EX in Tandy's lineup, and was similiar,
          except it has a 3.5" 720k diskette drive, with space for
          another, whereas the 1000EX had a 5.25" drive.  Both are
          considered 'XT-class' machines, primarily because they use
          the 8088-2 mpu chip, rather than the 8088 found in the
          original IBM PC.  The 8088-2, with the Tandy memory
          expansion (which includes a DMA chip), is significantly
          faster than the original 8088.  These 2 machines offered the
          proprietary Tandy TCGA enhanced graphics, and 3-voice sound
          circuitry.
              Tandy never offered hard drive systems for these
          machines, and even excluded any hard drive programs on the
          system diskettes.  Owners who looked for other sources found
          that generic hard drive systems wouldn't work with these
          machines because of 2 problems:
              a) these machines, like all Tandy 1000's, use a
              non-standard IRQ (5) to access the hard drive.
              b) these machines have unique card slots, called 'Plus
              style' connectors, so normal cards don't fit.
          Fortunately, several after-market suppliers soon created
          hard drive systems (and many other peripherals) for these
          machines.  They were advertised extensively in PCM magazine.
          One TandyPro Forum user, A. B. Trevor, uploaded a text file,
          'Hardex.rev', a few years ago, detailing his experience in
          installing a hard drive in his 1000EX.  Unfortunately, the
          uniqueness of these hard drives meant that they were higher
          priced than generic systems.  Because of this, and the
          limited selection, I, like most other HX and EX owners,
          decided to forego the hard drive route.  This is
          unfortunate, because these machines are certainly powerful
          enough to use a wide range of applications.  But, for many
          years in the PC world, hard drives have been almost a 'sine
          qua non' for any but the most simplistic applications.  With
          the popularity of hard drives, came more and more software
          which *required* a hard drive in order to operate.  Having a
          hard drive is also the easiest way to speed up processing,
          because their access time is significantly faster than
          diskette drives.  Another benefit is that the hard drive
          media, which is *never* touched by the read/write heads,
          lasts much longer than diskettes, which are.
              I primarily use my HX for maintaining a relatively small
          customer database which is interfaced with Q&A Write for
          Deskmate.  With the HX, I also bought the extra diskette
          drive B, which, when added to drive A, gave me a total of
          1.44 megabytes of storage.  Having 2 diskette drives gave me
          a lot of flexibility in organizing my diskettes, and
          minimized diskette swapping.  But recently, my customer
          database has become large enough that merging with Q&A Write
          takes painfully long, so I decided to investigate the 1000HX
          hard drive market again.  I looked up the companies in a
          1992 issue of PCM magazine and found that, surprisingly,
          many of them still offer the special drives and controllers,
          as well as many other EX/HX peripherals.  I have listed some
          of their names and phone #'s at the end of this article.
          Most of their prices have been significantly lowered, but
          after some research, the idea came to me that I could put
          together a hard drive system for even less cost.
              I found out that I didn't need a hard drive specially
          made for my machine, just a specially made hard drive
          controller, and just about any IDE hard drive made for (or
          that could be used with) XT-class, 8-bit machines.  It turns
          out that Seagate, and maybe others, made hard drives which
          would fit into my second diskette bay, and could be used
          with XT-class, 8-bit machines.  The Seagate ST351AX 42 meg
          drive is an example.  Seagate stopped producing this drive
          around 1992, but I found it's easy to find used ones (and as
          of this writing, Insight, listed below, still had some new
          ones).  I posted ads in local 'Buy/Sell' BBS networks, the
          national Fidonet 'HDCONF' conference, Compuserve's PCHW
          forum, this forum (TRS80PRO), and the Compuserve
          'Classified' system (GO CLASSIFIED).  In just a couple of
          days I had several offers, ranging from $35 to $50 for this
          drive.  I bought one from a BBS sysop who had seen my ad in
          the local 'Buy/Sell' BBS network.  The only inconveniences
          were that I no longer had a second diskette drive, and that
          I had to drill a couple of holes in my diskette drive
          chassis to make sure the new drive would fit solidly, though
          a person could use other means, such as foam, or tape, to
          accomplish this (actually, if a person didn't mind the
          appearance, and the hard drive cable is long enough, the
          hard drive could be placed outside the machine).  All that
          was left was to find the special controller.  MegaHaus and
          Micro Systems both sell the controller separately.  I got
          mine from Micro Systems.  My total cost for this project,
          including drive, controller, shipping, phone calls, and
          Compuserve connect charges, was less than $125.

          There are many peripherals available for the EX/HX,
          including hard drives, hard drive controllers, 8 meg memory
          cards, internal modem cards, VGA cards, sound cards, serial
          ports, fax, etc. sold by these suppliers (this list is for
          informational purposes only, and is *not* meant as an
          endorsement of any of these companies):

          PC Enterprises                    phone: 800-922-7257
          DCS Industries                           800-537-3539
          Insight (formerly Hard Drives Int'l)     800-377-3000
          MegaHaus                                 800-426-0560
          Tulin Technology                         408-432-9057
          Micro Systems                            717-528-8493

          P.S. Micro Systems tells me that there is a magazine
          available which supports the Tandy 1000 computers: Computer
          News PC, PO Box 680, Casper, WY, 82602, phone: 307-265-6483.

          EX/HX users: feel free to send me E-Mail.
          (c) January 14, 1995  Will Baldwin  CIS: 76200,275