Hardware Versions
There are at least 7 distinct variations of the TI-81, each with a unique external physical appearance:
- The original TI-81, which began production around the beginning of 1990. As well known, these do not have a backup battery; however, these do not have a bar below the [ON] button. Additionally, the place where the backup battery should be instead contains two plastic rings (see the detailed comparisons below for a picture).
- Still in pre-'A' hardware revisions, the second variant of the TI-81 was introduced in May 1991 to prepare for the implementation of the TI-81 'A' and TI-85. A plastic bar was added below the [ON] button to prevent accidental presses. The backup battery's socket and labeling is present under a flat plastic cover, but there are no contacts under the cover.
- The third variant of the TI-81, hardware revision 'A', added a backup battery. The battery information on the back of the calculator was updated to indicate this.
- The timing coinciding closely with the release of the TI-85, the fourth variant of the TI-81 (hardware revision 'B') drastically improved the quality of the display and changed the texture of the screen cover to the even texture used in all later calculators until the TI-73. The screen was upgraded to one with viewing characteristics quite similar to the TI-85's screen, with blue-on-green pixels and a wider viewing angle. Due to a change in the contrast-setting code, these all have ROM 1.8K. This variant had a long production run, from April 1992 to sometime around May 1993.
- Unfortunately, the fifth variant of the TI-81 undid these improvements. Externally, the most evident change is the housing plastic is no longer a bluish gray but rather a dark blue. The display bezel still uses the style of the TI-85 and variant 4 TI-81s. The mold used is very similar to that of the TI-82, differing only by the missing link port. Internally, this variant (and all future ones) use TI-82 PCBs and display drivers with TI-81 RAM and ROM chips. There are a few other changes, mostly relating to the higher CPU clock (6 MHz vs. 5 MHz) and different RAM/ROM chips. Different pinouts are compensated for by using zero-ohm resistors to connect the correct pins. All TI-81s of this variant that were checked use ROM V2.00.
- Towards the beginning of 1994 or the end of 1993 (I am not certain due to the very poor readability of date codes on the dark plastic TI-81s) the display bezel was restyled to match the TI-82's styling, with the "TI-81" text bolder and to the right, while the TI logo was moved to the far left of the bezel labeling area. Internally, the RAM chip was changed to use a Suwa Seikosha SRM2264 in place of a Sharp LH5160N (due to a very limited sample size, this is not confirmed), and the ROM version was updated to V2.0V.
- At the beginning of 1995, the TI-81, TI-82, and TI-85 all received a cosmetic change to their display bezels. On the TI-81, the display bezel was made much narrower, the background color is the same blue color as the calculator's plastic, and all text is white. "TI-81" is no longer italicized. Internally, the PCB was updated to version 31A (also seen on the TI-82). To my knowledge, no other internal changes were made.
ROM Versions
Nine ROM versions are known, dumped versions are in bold:
- 1.0
- 1.1
- 1.1K
- 1.5K
- 1.6V
- 1.6K
- 1.8K
- V2.00
- V2.0V