The drive used the IEEE–488 interface (24 wire parallel cable) to communicate with computers (also known as both the General Purpose Interface Bus (GPIB) and the Hewlett-Packard Interface Bus (HP-IB)). The transfer rate was 1.2 kB per second from the D9060/D9090. These hard drives can be
daisy chained on the interface with each device using a different device number. The D9060/D9090 were designed for use on the Commodore CBM/PET family of computers, but because these metal-cased family of computers were obsoleted by the
VIC-20 and the
Commodore 64, the greatest demand for these drives came from the biggest home computer user market in the world at the time, the VIC-20, C64 and
C128 users. As a result, several companies built interfaces that effectively give a VIC-20 and Commodore 64/128 an IEEE-488 port. The first produced was the VIC-20 IEEE 488 cartridge, model number "VIC-1112", produced by Commodore. Commodore 64 IEEE-488 interface cartridges were made by various companies. The original Commodore 64/128 IEEE Cartridge was produced later and were packaged with
SFD-1001 disk drives in Europe only, that would explain why this unit was unknown in the U.S. • Batteries Included - Buscard II Interface. (contains a
6532 RIOT,
6821 (
PIA) and and a Some other interfaces without pictures available: • E-LINK Serial to IEEE Interface. (contains
65C02,
6522 and 4 KB ROM) • INTERPOD - A standalone interface box, that connects the
CBM (IEC) serial to parallel IEEE-488 and serial
RS-232. It uses the
6502 CPU, 6532 RIOT,
6522 VIA,
6850 ACIA and chips.{{cite web|title=Interpod IEEE-488 Interface • MSD VIE ("VIC20 - 488") - 6522 VIA, 75160A & 75161A IEEE drivers. • MSD CEI ("C64 - 488") -
6526 CIA, 75160A & 75161A IEEE drivers. • Richvale Telecommunications (RTC) - C64-LINK - 6821 PIA, EPROM{{cite web • Richvale Telecommunications (RTC) - C64-LINK II - 6821 PIA, EPROM{{cite web == Commodore 64/128 usage ==