On 01/07/2019 09:51 AM, Peter Corlett via cctalk wrote: > On Sun, Jan 06, 2019 at 02:54:08PM -0700, ben via cctalk wrote: >> On 1/6/2019 12:24 PM, allison via cctalk wrote: >>> The small beauty of being there... FYI back then (1972) a 7400 was about >>> 25 cents and 7483 adder was maybe $1.25. Least that's what I paid. >> Checks my favorite supplier. >> $1.25 for 7400 and $4.00 for a 7483. >> It has gone up in price. > Thanks to inflation, $0.25 in 1972 is worth $1.51 now. Likewise, $1.25 has > inflated to $7.54. So they're cheaper in real terms than they used to be. > > However, it's still not entirely comparable, as I suspect nobody's making > 74-series chips any more so you're buying NOS. A modern equivalent would be a > microcontroller, which start at well under a dollar. > First I wasn't guessing back. I was building and buying back then. So that was what I actually paid in 1972, I've been at it since RTL hit the streets. The 74 series still made though more likely 74F, AS, or LS variant and of course CMOS 74ACT (and cmos friends) as I just bought a bunch. Dip is getting harder to get but the various SMT packages are easy. Prices for 10 or more of a part are cheap to cheaper from primary suppliers. The second tier suppliers are often several times that.
I figure most of what I did back then is years before many here were born. However I have enough NOS TTL 74LS, 74AS, 74F series to build several machines. I'm still building, current project is a very compact Z80 CP/M system using CF for disk. Mine uses all Zilog CMOS for very low power. Its a variant of the Grant Searle Z80 with memory management added to utilize all of the 124k ram and eeprom. If you want go look there. Allison