Specifications
Firmware: 3.54 MHz Zilog Z80A CPU
16K / 48K RAM
Display: 32 x 22 character text display
256 x 192 pixel resolution
8 colours
Sound: 1 channel, 5 octaves
I/O: Z80 bus, tape, RF television
Storage: External tape recorder or microdrives
"spectrum
plus"
The Spectrum+, released in October 1984, was a stop-gap produced to refresh the Spectrum at a time when the home computer market as a whole was suffering a slowdown.
Sinclair's own surveys showed that the Spectrum's peculiar rubber keyboard was a serious turnoff for prospective users. The Spectrum+ introduced no changes to the basic Spectrum hardware but provided a "professional keyboard" which had an uncanny resemblance to that of the QL. It was later adapted for the short-lived Spectrum 128. It was not a proper typewriter-style keyboard as found on PCs, but instead used much the same technology as the old-style Spectrum 48K (and the later Z88), with keys - in this case made of injection-moulded plastic - resting on top of a rubber membrane. Many users did not find this wholly satisfactory in practice.
The machine sold for 179ドル.95 (compared to the cost of the rubber-keyed 48K model at 129ドル.95) or 50ドル for a do-it-yourself kit for the user to convert a rubber-keyed version to a Spectrum+. Although the machine sold adequately, the familiar Sinclair quality control gremlins struck again - the keys had an unfortunate tendency to fall off. Retailers such as Boots reported a failure rate of up to 30%, compared with a more usual 5-6%.