Cyberdeck Inspired Raspberry Pi Center

So there is somewhat of a tradition of repurposing old portable computers into “cyberdecks” with modern guts. Sounds like fun but I have a practical use for something like this that needs a bigger foundation than the usual C64 or TRS-80.

I have some Raspberry Pi projects coming up and I always find a pain to go hunt down a power supply, a reasonably sized monitor, keyboard, mouse, and connectivity to work with a Pi. So my interpretation of the cyberdeck needs to be big enough to be usable as a Pi programmer with all that stuff included and room to store the Pi as well.

So the time came to put on my tie and suspenders and get all 80’s business dude to buy one of these things off ebay:

It weighs about 10lbs, features a blue text screen on a slightly lighter blue background, and runs everything, including two 3.5″ floppy drives off a tiny lead acid battery.

The one I got arrived in complete but pleasantly worn condition. My favorite part is the faint outlines of a “Buffalo Public Schools” sticker on the lid. And that the graphics and ribbed features reminded me of something from Silent Running. Just look at all those pins on the ports! USB saved us from a lot.

This is a peek at the original insides. A lot of discrete components everywhere and one little 7 mhz 8 bit processor in there somewhere. What a deal for $1700 in 1987 money.

It supposedly worked but I didn’t bother to turn it on before I had it gutted and started mocking up parts. My plan was to keep the external appearance and keyboard and get rid of everything else so I could fit it out with modern tech and storage.

I’m close to being finished with this project and I will do a more complete write-up. The biggest challenge has been the case material. It’s a thick, brittle plastic with conductive silver paint on the inside and a glued conductive foil on the outside with gray paint on top that just wants to jump off. What a nightmare to work with!