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Subject: Re: Fidelity's Chess Challenger 10

Author: John Coffey

Date: 14:27:35 01/20/99

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On January 20, 1999 at 12:54:01, William Kerr wrote:

>In Feb 1979 I wrote a letter to Fidelity Electronics asking for information
>on Chess Challenger 10. Here is a synoposis of what they wrote back with:
>
>The processor was a Z80A (probability running a 4 Mhz.)
>
>The software could analyze 35 chess positions per second.
>
>The following table shows how many moves it searched at each level
>
>where X = all moves
>
> level     depth (plys)                          TIME
>
>           1     2     3     4     5     6
>
>   1       X                                     5 Seconds
>   2       20    X                               15 Seconds
>   3       16    24    X                         35 Seconds
>   4       20    8     4                         1.5 Minutes
>   5       20    8     4     2                   2.5 Minutes
>   6       X     X     X     X                   1 Hour
>   7       X     X     X     X     24    X       24 Hours
>   8       20    24    4     4     X             11 Minutes
>   9       20    12    4     4     X             6 Minutes
>  10       16    24    4     X                   3 Minutes
>
>For those of you that never owned any of the Chess Computers back in the
>70's may find these postings pointless but for those that did, info
>on old chess computers brings back memories. Though I suppose in 20 years
>someone will be telling how strong CM6k, Fritz5.32, Craftyxx.x, Rebel10, ....
>was and the hardware they were run on.

Why would you conclude that it was running at 4mhz?  If so, the rate of
35 moves per second seems very low as some 6502 4 mhz machines searched
900 movers per second.  (The 6502 is about twice as fast per clock cycle as a
Z80.)


John Coffey



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