One of the first parts in technical papers is a survey of existing works.
Z8000 board (the Trump Card) by Steve Ciarcia in Byte magazine
Hardware: A full-length ISA board as a slave to the PC. Most of it is a massive array of sixty-four 4164 DRAM chips giving 512K of RAM. These could be replaced by a pair of 512K SRAM chips. Communication is through a 2K RAM with counter supplying the address lines.
Software: It ran a BASIC interpreter but I can't find it in any form on the web.
Documentation: Several articles in Byte magazine.
Z8000 board by Rolf-Dieter Klein
Hardware: I believe this is documented in one of his books, but I can't find a copy online.
Software: There is a listing of a Z8000 BASIC interpreter (and the Z80 BASIC it was based on) in his book. I've had a go converting the listing into a form that can be assembled by non-Z8000 assemblers, but I have nothing to test it on yet.
Documentation: His books are in the German language.
Z8000 board by Christopher Ramage
Hardware: He has made a PCB for this. An Atmel Arduino board is used for boot-up and debugging.
Software: Not publicly available.
Documentation: Just the circuit diagram.
Z8000 S8000 system by Zilog
Hardware: Lots of documentation on this website but the S8000 system is very big and used lots of small-scale TTL and chips of the period. So it is bigger and more complicated than necessary these days.
Software: Many EPROM images with source code.
Documentation: Plenty. Some of the scanned circuit diagrams have been redrawn on a modern ECAD package, and are much easier to read.
Z8000 board videos by 737MHz
Hardware: Constructed on prototyping board.
Software: Runs BASIC.
The videos show the board running BASIC but there is no verbal or written commentary.
Documentation: No links to any documentation.
The PC downloading software has a Japanese user interface, so searching for Japanese web-pages is a rich source of links.
Z8000 projects on Github
tgtakaoka has done a lot of work writing assemblers, and supporting the Z8000.
4sun5bu has a Z8001 project built on prototyping board with circuit diagrams and software. It boots from a microcontroller, and runs CP/M-8000. It is the most advanced project I can find.
4sun5bu is also this chap: https://www.blogger.com/profile/10308244904742468931 whose Japanese name translates to 4 inch 5 minutes. I think it refers to a size of dagger. His blog https://choisaki.blogspot.com/ has a lot of Z8000 stuff.
Scott M. Baker's Z8000 + CP/M 8000 project
Based on 4sun5bu's project, and laid out on PCBs. The memory is on a different card to the CPU.
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