Commodore Pet 8032-32B

 Home > Browse Our Collection > Computers > Commodore > Commodore Pet 8032-32B
 

The Commodore PET (Personal Electronic Transactor) was a home/personal computer produced from 1977 by Commodore International. A top-seller in the Canadian and United States educational markets, it was Commodore's first full-featured computer, and formed the basis for their entire 8-bit product line. The PET has a special place in the history of micro-computers, as it was one of the biggest sellers in the 1979/1980 period, when computers were aimed at both the home and business market. Many people instantly recognise the PET as it stood out from the usual ' terminal plus box' computer.

The Pet 8000 series was released in May 1980, three years after the original PET 2001. Although it has the same MOS 6502 CPU, running at the same speed (1MHz), improved circuitry allowed the 8000 series to run substantially faster. The 8000 series uses Basic 4.0. It features a 12-inch screen for the first time as standard.

This machine was a major remodelling of the range, and was targeted more at the business user rather than the home market, which was a shift in strategy from the 2001/3000 machines. Business users were the main target of new features in the new 4.0 Basic, although like models before it, and afterwards, the impact in the US market was stunted by the lack of CP/M compatibility.

8032 refers to 80x25 character display. The machine shipped with 32K standard as the 8032, but allowed another 64K to be added externally. Later the upgrade was installed from the factory, creating the 8096. This example in our collection is the 32K model, hence the 8032.

Commodore also released the PET 4000 Series around the same time as the CBM 8000 Series. The 4000 Series is almost identical, except for having a 9-inch screen as standard instead of the 12-inch screen, displaying 40 characters per line of text.

This was the end of the line for the Commodore PET, which signified the end of Commodore's work in the business market. Many reviewers believe was one of many serious errors in strategy which eventually lead to the company's demise.

This model is the 8032-32B.

Manufacturer: Commodore
Date: 1982



Comment on This Page

Other Systems Related To Commodore Pet 8032-32B:

Item Manufacturer Date
Commodore PET 3016 Commodore 1977
Commodore PET 2001 Commodore June 1977
Commodore PET 2001 (Blue Label) Commodore June 1977
Commodore PET 2001-32N Commodore June 1978
Commodore PET CBM 3008 Commodore 1979
Commodore PET 3032 Commodore 1979
Commodore PET 8032SK Commodore 1980
Commodore Pet 4032-32N Commodore May 1980
Commodore PET 4008 Commodore May 1980
Commodore SuperPet (SP9000) Commodore 1981
Commodore PET 8096SK Commodore 1981
Commodore VIC-20 Commodore 1981
Commodore VC-20 Commodore 1981
Commodore VIC-20 Commodore 1981
Commodore 64 Commodore August 1982
Commodore PET 8296-D Commodore 1983
Commodore SX-64 (110v US) Commodore 1983
Commodore SX-64 (240V UK) Commodore 1983
Commodore 16 Commodore June 1984
Commodore Plus 4 Commodore June 1984
Commodore 128 Commodore January 1985
Commodore Amiga 1000 Commodore 23rd July 1985
Commodore 128D Commodore December 1985
Commodore Amiga A2000 Commodore 1987
Commodore Amiga A500 Class of the 90s Pack Commodore 1987
Commodore PC-I Commodore 1987
Commodore 64 C German Commodore March 1987
Commodore 64 C Hollywood Presents Pack Commodore March 1987
Commodore 64 C Commodore March 1987
Commodore 64 C Terminator 2 Pack Commodore March 1987
Commodore Amiga A500 Plus Commodore April 1987
Commodore 64 C Light Fantastic Pack Commodore March 1989
Commodore Amiga 1500 Commodore 1990
Commodore C286-LT Portable Commodore 1990
Commodore Amiga 1500 (PC Card Configuration) Commodore 1990
Commodore C386SX-LT Commodore 1991
Commodore Amiga A600HD Commodore 1992
Commodore Amiga A600 Commodore March 1992
Commodore Amiga 4000 Commodore October 1992
Commodore Amiga 1200 Commodore 21st October 1992
Commodore Amiga 1200 Commodore 21st October 1992
Commodore Amiga CD32 Commodore September 1993

This exhibit has a reference ID of CH44068. Please quote this reference ID in any communication with the Centre for Computing History.

 

Commodore Pet 8032-32B

  Book Archive   [4]
  Games Archive   [8]
  Software Archive   [42]
  Type-in Listings   [1]
  Peripherals   [14]

Click on the Image(s) For Detail


Articles

Memories - Notes by a physicist who dabbled with computers - John Yates
Memories - Working with the Commodore PET and the BBC Micro by Dr Geoff Luxford
Me and My Computer by Thomas Turnbull

Help support the museum by buying from the museum shop

View all items

Founding Sponsors
redgate Google ARM Real VNC Microsoft Research
Heritage Lottery Funded
Heritage Lottery Fund
Accredited Museum