Transam Advert - February 1982
From Personal Computer World
The model of good business: Tuscan - the all-British microcomputer
Perhaps the chosen name - Tuscan - in the context of "all British" was meant to be ironic, but anyway this machine, an update of the regular Tuscan which had been launched the year before, maintains its "Commodore PET on steroids" case design, whilst also making a thing of being based on the 1974-vintage S-100 bus, hence the name Tuscan S100.
Maybe there were a lot of manufacturing control systems still using this architecture.
The entry-level price was £2,125, or about £9,140 in 2024 prices. Stick a 5MB Winchester on and it was £3,625 - a cool £15,600 in 2024.
Additional software was also available, including word processing at £315 (£1,350) and a business accounts package at a bargain £800, or £3,440 now.
Text and otherwise-uncredited photos © nosher.net 2024. Dollar/GBP conversions, where used, assume $1.50 to £1. "Now" prices are calculated dynamically using average RPI per year.