The TRS-80 Model III, released in July 1980, was the direct successor to the Model I, offering an all-in-one design that integrated the monitor, keyboard, and floppy drives into a single unit. It retained full compatibility with Model I software but improved reliability by eliminating the external cabling issues that plagued its predecessor. Featuring a Z80 CPU, up to 48KB of RAM, an 80-column text display, and built-in sound (finally!), the Model III became a fixture in schools and small businesses. It marked a transition toward more self-contained systems just before the IBM PC era began.
Technical Information | |
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Name | TRS-80 Model III |
Manufacturer | Tandy |
Launched | Tuesday, July 1, 1980 |
Discontinued | 1983 |
Launch Price | $699 USD |
Country | United States |
CPU | Zilog Z80A @ 2.03 MHz |
Units Sold | ~200,000 |
Power | Internal 120V PSU (U.S. models) |
Operating System | TRSDOS 1.3, LDOS, CP/M (with expansion) |
Expansion | RS-232C serial, Centronics parallel, optional hard disk via expansion |
Storage | Cassette interface (500 baud), up to 2 × 5.25" floppy drives |
Keyboard | Full-stroke 53-key QWERTY keyboard with numeric keypad |
Sound | Internal speaker for basic beeps and tones |
Graphics | Semigraphics via custom character sets |
Display | 80×24 or 64×16 text (12" monochrome CRT) |
ROM | 14KB (Monitor, Level II BASIC, keyboard handling) |
RAM | 16KB or 48KB configurations |
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