The history of Nascom starts with the history of John A. Marshall. Marshall was the "& Son" of "A Marshall & Son (London) Ltd", Marshall was a director of a company called Nasco Sales Ltd; a UK distributor of US
semiconductors. He was also connected with a company called Lynx Electronics (London) Ltd. which had been a regular advertiser in the hobby electronics press since 1976. During a business trip to California in the Autumn of 1976, Marshall attended an amateur computer club meeting at
Stanford University. On the flight home, he started to wonder whether there was a market in the UK for a kit computer. Marshall used the price of an
SLR camera (about £200) as a reference point for the amount someone might be prepared to spend on a "hobby" purchase. By July 1977, monthly magazine adverts by Lynx Electronics were starting to hint about a microprocessor seminar in the autumn and a forthcoming computer product. On Saturday, 26 November 1977, Lynx Electronics launched the Nascom 1 at their "Home Microcomputer Symposium" at
Wembley Conference Centre,
London. Tickets cost £3.50 and hosting the event on a Saturday pitched it at an amateur/hobbyist rather than a professional audience. The event included a raffle for a Nascom 1 computer kit. About 550 people attended the
symposium and over 300 kits were sold in the two weeks following the launch. The symposium was covered in detail in Issue 1 of
PCW magazine and the Nascom 1 was the cover photograph for that issue (though not with the final keyboard). An article in that issue by K. S. Borland (another director of Nasco Sales Ltd) described the origins and history of the Nascom 1 design. In January 1978, the Lynx Electronics advert in Practical Electronics listed the Nascom 1 in addition to their traditional list of electronic components. By February 1978 and thereafter the whole of their advert was devoted to the Nascom 1. After the success of their seminar in
Wembley, Lynx electronics held a similar event in
Manchester (Saturday, 1 April 1978. Tickets cost £5.50). The launch price for the Nascom 1 was £197.50 plus 8%
VAT, The advert does not name the machine as a Nascom 1 but the specification is identical. By January 1979, Lynx Electronics had appointed multiple dealers in the UK and were advertising as Nascom Microcomputers, with the "nm" logo. In September 1979,
PCW reported that Grovewood Securities had invested £500,000 in Nascom. The same article reported that
PAL full-colour support would arrive for the Nascom by "the new year". In September 1979, the Nascom 2 (kit) was announced with a list price of £295 +
VAT. Then, Nascom were hit by a shortage of Mostek MK4118 1Kx8 RAM devices. 10 devices were required per Nascom 2 (1 each for video RAM and workspace RAM respectively, 8 for user RAM) but Nascom were only able to source 5,000 parts. By November 1979 Nascom had decided to relaunch the product with a 16Kbyte
DRAM board and NASBUS interconnect but to keep the price at £295 +
VAT. This arrangement only required 2 MK4118 devices, allowing Nascom to ship 2,500 systems. By December 1979, PCW reported that the first deliveries of the Nascom 2 were going out. that it had asked Grovewood Securities Ltd to appoint a receiver after it had been unable to secure further investment. Grovewood appointed Messrs Cork Gully, and Marshall resigned from the company to start a new business, Gemini Computers. that Nascom had been bought by
Lucas Industries; the same issue contained a full-page advert under the name "Nascom Microcomputers. Division of Lucas Logic Ltd". In December 1981, the Nascom 3 was launched. This was basically a cased Nascom 2 with some expansion boards. In June 1984, the final issue of the Nascom Newsletter was published. In January 1985,
PCW published a letter from Lucas Nascom stating that, while the Nascom 1 had been discontinued, the Nascom 2 and Nascom 3 were still in production. == Unit Sales ==