This Australian computer was in fact built and conceived in Hong Kong by Soundic Electronics, which produced a lot of low-end products at that time.
The high-resolution (256 x 192) can only be accessed with at least a 16k RAM extension.
The Basic (SD-Basic 2.0) is supplied on a ROM cartridge, it allowed to display up to 32 sprites.
The Pencil II also came with an interesting expansion cartridge. The regular cartridge port was the exact same size as a Colecovision cartridge, and when you plugged the "Colecvision Support" cartridge into the side of the unit, it played regular Colecvision games.
Unfortunately, very few games and applications were developped and the Pencil II quickly fell into oblivion...
We need more info about this pong ! If you designed, used, or have more info about this system,
please send us pictures or anything you might find useful.
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Pencil.... What a strange name to give to a computer...
Friday 14th January 2022
rod (Canada)
Hello, my name is Pedro, I am new to this great forum.
I have had a device saved for a long time, but I really don''t know if it has any value, I would like to know if someone could help me.
I find very little information about it, and I have never seen any for sale.
Thank you very much
Saturday 30th January 2021
Pedro (España)
Warm memories for me too!
For a strange dream that I had tonight, I remembered the "Hanimex" brand of my very first microcomputer. So I just Googled it to find again the "Pencil II" name that I totally forgot since many years. For this reason I''m here now in June 2020 writing about it.
This Pencil II has been my first computer purchased by my dear parents when I had only 11 years near 1984. At that time some of my friends had the great ZX80 and I remember going to their home after school to play and learn programming with Basic and Logo languages. My family and I were living in France and unfortunately, ZX80 price was too expensive for my parents. Anyhow, my mom and dad clearly understood that such "machines" were an important investment for my future. So in a local French computer show, they saw this Pencil II by Hanimex in a stand at a more affordable price, so they decided to purchase it for me. It was still a big investment for my poor family at that time, but still less than the more expensive Sinclair model.
In the next couple of years I used this microcomputer almost 2 or 3 hours per day at home, connected to the TV after homework. As there were almost no programmes and specially no friends with same machine, I had to programm my own small games and some basic software tools with its BASIC cartridge. The hardware was really limited, specially the RAM, so I had to spare all my pocket money to purchase a huge lateral 16KB expansion in order to take more advantage of it. And also a cassette player to save my programms on tapes. I still remember that the machine design was really nice with a robust manufacture. Its keyboard with soft plastic keys was not so uncomfortable as it could seem on pictures, although for sure nothing similar to a good PC keyboard. The graphics were basic (low resolution with support for some few sprites) but I remember that sound capabilities were pretty nice at that time.
The machine was very limited and after a while it was quite complex to get much more of it. Specially because at that time there was no fan communities to exchange information as the device did not have commercial success in France and unfortunately Internet still did not exist. Anyhow I still remember to have enjoyed it a lot. And for sure this was my first step in the wonderful software world that today is paying my bills, so I will be always very grateful to my parents for having me purchased this nice Pencil II by Hanimex.
Cheers!
François
PD: some years ago, my mom did a last cleaning of old "junks" that were in my room and this great computer memory finished in the recycling trash... yes, really sad... although it''s only hardware and nothing comparable to the pleasant memories that I still have of that old times and that hopefully will still remain in my biological memory until my own recycling time.
Friday 5th June 2020
François
NAME
PENCIL II
MANUFACTURER
Hanimex
ORIGIN
Australia
YEAR
1984
BUILT IN GAMES
SD-Basic 2.0 available on cartridge
CONTROLLERS
Chicklet keyboard with 6 function keys, 4 arrow keys and a reset key
CPU
Zilog Z80 A
BUTTONS
Unknown
SWITCHES
One custom chip for video, sound, I/O and memory management