Coleco Telstar  Telstar Ranger
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Telstar Ranger

This is the first Telstar featuring the two shooting games that the General instruments AY-3-8500 Ball and Paddle chip was capable of. The console was released in 1977. The machine came with a light-gun that resembled a colt-style revolver.

The machine included all six games that the AY-3-8500 was capable of. The games could be selected through a button on the console, and are market as hockey, handball, tennis, jail alai, target, and skeet. The machine came with two separate paddle controllers for the ball games. Each game had speed control for different experience levels (beginner, intermediate, and professional).

The console is powered through an AC adaptor, or six C batteries. The light-gun required a separate 9Volt battery.

Telstar Ranger

The AY-3-8500 "Ball & Paddle" IC

The AY-3-8500 "Ball & Paddle" integrated circuit was the first in a series of ICs from General Instrument designed for the consumer video game market.

In 1975 General Instruments developed the AY-3-8500 chip that would revolutionize home gaming. Initially there was no interest in the chip, General Instruments could not find interested buyers. At the same time Coleco had the desire to built a home console. Thanks to Ralph Baer, the brain behind the Magnavox Odyssey, Coleco and GI found each other and in 1976 Coleco Telstar was put on the market. It immediately became serious competition for the Magnavox Odyssey.

Ultimately the AY-3-8500 was used in more than 200 consoles, from the APF TV Fun, the Philips Tele-Spiel Las Vegas, the Sears Hockey Tennis game to the Tandy TV-Scoreboard and many, many more.

The AY-3-8500 was designed to output video to an RF modulator, which would then display the game on a domestic television set. The AY-3-8500 contained six built in games:

  1. Tennis/Pong
  2. Soccer/Hockey
  3. Squash
  4. Practice game
  5. Shooting 1
  6. Shooting 2

The AY-3-8500 was the 625-line PAL version and the AY-3-8500-1 was the 525-line NTSC version. It was introduced in 1976 with Coleco the first manufacturer to implement the chip in its Telstar console. Only a few external components were needed to build a complete system, which made this chip an attractive option to produce cheap pong machines.

The AY-3-8500 was the first iteration of the chip with black-and-white video output. It was possible to colorize the game by using an additional chip, such as the AY-3-8515.

The AY-3-8500 Pin-Out

Technical Details
Released 1977 Brand Coleco Telstar Type Coleco Telstar TV Games Name Telstar Ranger CPU Class AY-3-8xxx CPU General Instruments AY-3-8500 Ball & Paddle Memory RAM: none Sound Chip none Sound One channel mono beeps Display Chip GI AY-3-8500 Display Vertical oriented black and white raster display Best Color Black and White Best Graphics TV Resolution Sprites none System OS Proprietary Storage none, built in games
Related Systems
 
Coleco Telstar TV Games
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Telstar  Ranger (1977)
Related Media
World Wide Web Links
 
Ball and Paddle IC (AY-3-8500)
Wikipage about the Ball and Paddle IC, the AY-3-8500