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USBSID-Pico is a RPi Pico (RP2040/W RP2350) based board for interfacing one or two MOS SID chips and/or hardware SID emulators over (WEB)USB with your computer, phone, ASID supporting player or USB midi controller

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USBSID-Pico
USBSID-PicoLouD

USBSID-Pico

USBSID-Pico is a RPi Pico (RP2040) based board for interfacing one or two MOS SID chips and/or hardware SID emulators over (WEB)USB with your computer, phone, ASID supporting player or USB midi controller.

Features

Information about and explanation of features are Coming Soonā„¢
USBSID-Pico

SID Playing

USBSID-Pico supports various ways of playing SID files.
Out-of-the box playing is supported by using Deepsid by Chordian
by selecting WebUSB (Hermit) as player in the pulldown menu or
by selecting ASID (MIDI) as player in the pulldown menu.
SidBerry is a command line SID file player for Linux with up to 4 SIDs supported.
Unofficial support is added to a fork of Vice, up to 3 SIDs are supported in vsid and up to 4 in xs64.
Unofficial support is added to a fork of RetroDebugger, up to 4 SIDs are supported.

C64 Music trackers

When using Vice or RetroDebugger you can freely use applications like SID-Wizard for music creation.

Midi

USBSID-Pico acts as Midi device and supports basic Midi in ~ note that Midi is still in development and in Beta phase.

Questions and Support

Any questions about or support with USBSID-Pico can be asked

Project status

Visit the Project Page for an up-to-date list of things being worked on. Firmware is in beta stage and still in development.
While in development any mentioned features, options, etc. are subject to change.

Test and config your board

I have set up a small test player using Hermit's JsSID implementation (borrowed from Deepsid).
You can test (and config) your board with WebUSB and ASID here: USBSID.
If needed you can change your SID count configuration after selecting WebUSB.

Supported platforms

In development
Linux: Vice, RetroDebugger, SidBerry, JSidplay2, USB Midi, ASID (in webbrowser) SID Play
Windows: Vice
Windows/Android: USB Midi, ASID (in webbrowser) SID Play

Firmware (current version 0.2.1-BETA)

See the firmware changelog for more information on what's changed and previous releases.

Firmware versions

Use usbsidpico.uf2 for regular green rp2040 Pico boards.
Use usbsidpico-rgb.uf2 for black clone rp2040 Pico boards with RGB LED onboard.
WARNING! Do NOT use the RGB firmware for the regular green rp2040 Pico boards.

How to flash

A Raspberry Pi Pico board is incredibly easy to flash, as it comes with a built in bootloader for flashing new firmwares in the uf2 format. In order to flash a new firmware to your USBSID-Pico you will need to put the Pico into bootloader mode. This can be done in 2 ways:

  1. While the Pico is seated on the USBSID-Pico board and with the USB cable plugged into your computer and the Pico do the following:
    • Press and hold the BOOTSEL button on the Pico.
    • Press and release the RST button on the USBSID-Pico board.
    • Now release the BOOTSEL button.
    • A new drive should appear on your computer called RPI-RP2.
    • Copy the correct uf2 firmware file to this folder.
    • After copying the Pico will reboot and your Pico is flashed.
  2. When flashing a Pico that is not seated on the board do the following:
    • Plug in the USB cable to your Pico and not into your computer.
    • While holding the BOOTSEL button on the Pico plugin the other end of the USB cable into your computer.
    • Now release the BOOTSEL button.
    • A new drive should appear on your computer called RPI-RP2.
    • Copy the correct uf2 firmware file to this folder.
    • After copying the Pico will reboot and your Pico is flashed.

Firmware features

The firmware is still in development so features might change, be added or removed.

  • By default both sockets are enabled and the configuration is set to 2 SID's.
  • Custom CDC protocol for playing SID files or usage with emulators
  • WebUSB support using the same CDC protocol for WebUSB supporting players
  • Midi (in) ASID support (heavily inspired by multiple sources)
    • Play SID files in your (midi supporting) browser via Deepsid by Chordian
    • Play SID files in your (midi supporting) browser via IneSID by Fazibear
  • Midi device support over USB
    • Use your USBSID-Pico as Synth with your Midi controller
  • Two SID sockets with up to 4 SID's (e.g. SKPico) supported
    • Socket one address range $00 ~ $3F (default $00 ~ $1F)
    • Socket two address range $20 ~ $7F (default $20 ~ $3F)
    • Configurable (platform independent (Linux/Windows) tool still in development)
  • Onboard LED acts as VU meter calculated by the voices of SID1
  • Onboard RGB LED acts as second VU meter calculated by the voices of SID1 (default)
    • Requires Black Pico clone board with RGB LED onboard!
    • SID voices to use for calculation can be changed in config
  • Uses the TinyUSB stack

ISSUES that need addressing (Any help is welcome)

  • Digiplay does not work like it should. This is a driver issue (client side). At one point I had this working with Async LIBUSB but forgot to backup it, DOH!
    See the discussion about this.

Building

You can build the firmware using the Pico SDK 2.0.0 and TinyUSB from it's Github repo, not the one included in the SDK!

Hardware

Where to buy

Assembled boards while available (and minus Pico) can be purchased from me - send me a message on any of my socials.
At a minimum of 5 assembled boards it is also possible to purchase at PCBWay here.
I am currently negotiating the possibility for the boards to be purchasable at an online store here in NL.

Schematic and BOM

If you want and are up to it you can create your own development board by using the provided schematic and interactive BOM.

PCB Features ~ v1.0

  • Supports all MOS SID chips e.g. MOS6581, MOS6582 & MOS8580
  • Supports SID chip replacements e.g. SIDKick-Pico, SwinSID, ARMSID (untested), FPGASID (untested)
  • 1 MHz oscillator (external optional, enabled via jumper pad)
    • if no external clock is detected USBSID-Pico will generate a 1 MHz square wave using pio
      • clock speed is configurable
    • if an external clock is detected will read the external clock signal
  • Power via USB
    • 5v stepup for clean 5v VCC to both SID chips
    • 12v or 9v stepup for clean VDD to both SID chips
  • Audio out filter as in the C64 schematics
    • With optional 6581 resistor, solder the 6581 (mislabeled 8580!) jumper pad in each audio circuit for this.
  • Audio jumper
    • SID1 audio left & right
    • SID1 audio left & SID2 audio right
  • Optional EXT-IN pulldown resistor as filter bypass to reduce filter noise for Digiplay on 8580 SID's

PCB Development

  • v1.0 release board
  • v0.2 improved testboard
  • v0.1 testboard

Important PCB information


Click image for larger view

  1. 12 volt or 9 volt selection jumper
    Voltage jumper
  • open = 12 volt (for 6581 SID only!!)
  • closed = 9 volt (for 8580 SID)
  1. Socket 2 6581 / 8580 SID type selection jumpers
    SID2 selection jumper
  • both closed left = 6581
  • both closed right = 8580
  1. Socket 1 6581 / 8580 SID type selection jumpers
    SID1 selection jumper
  • both closed left = 6581
  • both closed right = 8580
  1. Audio channel selection jumper
    Audio jumper
  • closed on Socket 1 side = left & right channel for socket 1
  • closed on Socket 2 side = left channel for socket 2 & right channel for socket 1
  1. Address line A5 for adressess above $1F (SKPico 2nd SID for example)
    Address 5 pins
  • both pins are routed to the same GPIO for using adresses higher then $20
  1. Uart debugging output port
    UART port
  • TX on the right
  • RX on the left
  1. Optional 330k pulldown resistor hooked up to EXT-IN for 8580 filter bypass in socket 2
    EXTIN bypass
  • solder closed = enabled
  1. Optional 330k pulldown resistor hooked up to EXT-IN for 8580 filter bypass in socket 1
    EXTIN bypass
  • solder pad closed = enabled
  1. Optional 1MHz crystal socket (not included in BOM)
    Optional Crystal
  • solder pad closed = enabled (when a crystal is socketed)
  • this disables the internal clock generation on the Pico
  1. Optional 1k resistor for 6581 SID in socket 2
  • ATTENTION!: This solder pad label is incorrect, it should read 6581!
    6581 jumper
  • solder pad closed = enabled
  1. Optional 1k resistor for 6581 SID in socket 2
  • ATTENTION!: This solder pad label is incorrect, it should read 6581!
    6581 jumper
  • solder pad closed = enabled
  1. Socket 2 audio out via dupont connector
    Audio out
  • Ground and S2 as labeled
  1. Socket 1 audio out via dupont connector
    Audio out
  • Ground and S1 as labeled
  1. Reset button
    Reset button

Examples

USBSID-Pico in action

While in development any videos and/or audio links are subject to be changed or updated.

MOS8580 chip

Layers
Finnish Gold
Mojo
Bonzai & Pretzel Logic
Spy vs Spy II
The Island Caper
MOS8580 MOS8580 MOS8580

Visit my Youtube channel, other socials or the SHOWCASE page to see more examples.

Software

Available examples with USBSID-Pico support:
HardSID USB / SidBlaster USB driver example
Vice fork is available @ https://github.com/LouDnl/Vice-USBSID
SidBerry fork is available @ https://github.com/LouDnl/SidBerry
RetroDebugger fork is available @ https://github.com/LouDnl/RetroDebugger

Precompiled Vice binaries

Pre compiled Vice binaries are available in my fork @ https://github.com/LouDnl/Vice-USBSID/tree/main/builds

Acknowledgements

Special thanks goes out to Tobozo for making the USBSID-Pico logo and for his (mentalšŸ¤£) support since starting this project.

Some portions of this code and board are heavily inspired on projects by other great people. Some of those projects are - in no particular order:

Disclaimer

I do this stuff in my free time for my enjoyment. Since I like to share my joy in creating this with everyone I try my best to provide a working PCB and Firmware. I am in no way an electronics engineer and can give no guarantee that this stuff does not break or damage your hardware, computer, phone, or whatever you try to hook it up to. Be sure to take great care when inserting any real MOS SID chips into the board. While everything has been tested with real chips, this is in no way a guarantee that nothing could go wrong. Use of this board and firmware at your own risk! I am in no way responsible for your damaged hardware. That being said, have fun!

License

Software License ~ GNUv2

All code written by me in this repository islicensed under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, version 2. Any code in this repository that is not written by me automatically falls under the licensing conditions by the authors of said code as mentioned in the source code header.

Hardware License ~ Creative Commons

USBSID-Pico PCB by LouD is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International