The Mark 2 from SCA Systems is a peripheral that provides the PCW ecosystem with an RS232C serial port, a Centronics parallel port and also features a real-time clock (RTC).
The Mark 2 from SCA Systems is a peripheral that provides the PCW ecosystem with an RS232C serial port, a Centronics parallel port and also features a real-time clock (RTC).
Designed and manufactured in the late 1980s by the specialized hardware firm SCA Systems, the Mark 2 (Mk II) expansion stands out as one of the most advanced and complete professional-grade multi-function peripherals engineered for the Amstrad PCW 8256 and 8512 computers. Conceived as an integrated alternative to surpass Amstrad's official CPS8256 interface, SCA Systems' purpose with the Mark 2 was to centralize all vital office communication links into a single, compact add-on module. This design elegantly prevented motherboard expansion bus saturation caused by chaining multiple discrete single-purpose expansion cards.
At the low-level hardware tier, the ultimate competitive advantage of the Mark 2 over its direct contemporary rivals was the inclusion of an onboard **Real-Time Clock (RTC)** circuit. In stock Amstrad PCW setups, the CP/M Plus operating system was structurally unable to retain the system time and calendar date after a power cycle, forcing professional operators to manually type them via console command lines upon every single cold boot. The Mark 2 completely automated this process: during the system initialization sequence, a small resident device driver polled the peripheral's timekeeper chip and instantly injected the exact, accurate time matrix straight into the CP/M Plus file allocation ecosystem, ensuring pristine chronological logging for business spreadsheets and documents.
To guarantee flawless 100% compatibility with all mainstream commercial business software without requiring proprietary vendor drivers inside user applications, SCA Systems' engineers decodified the board's integrated circuits to perfectly match the standard hardware address spaces of the machine:
0E0h to 0E3h (UART serial RS-232C control and data registers, and the 8-bit output data latch buffer for the Centronics parallel port). This strict choice ensured that professional word processors (such as LocoScript) or dedicated terminal telecom software operated instantly right out of the box, cleanly identifying the pass-through expansion hardware.