Would you mind me using your tips for wire wrapping for a tutorial at the
Computer History Wiki (
I've learned wire-wrapping right now and thought others should get a little
help.
Ulli
Am Sa., 31. Aug. 2024 um 07:55 Uhr schrieb Vincent Slyngstad via cctalk <
cctalk(a)classiccmp.org>gt;:
  On 8/30/2024 7:25 PM, cz via cctalk wrote:
  To try and turn this thread around: I'm
looking to make an extended
 memory controller for my pdp8/L. I've got a wire wrap backplane and
 enough cards to make it work but I've never done wire-wrap on this sort
 of scale.
 I've got an old Radio Shack Wire wrap tool and a lot of wire. Is there
 any sites that discuss how to do reasonable wire-wrapping?
 
 Some of the older (single-sided especially) DEC back-planes were wrapped
 with heavier gauge wire, which needs a different tool. The newer
 back-planes seem to be wrapped with 30 gauge wire. You can tell the old
 connector blocks, as the pins appear rectangular, rather then square.
 There are all kinds of opportunity for optimizing routing for distance,
 cross-talk and and other esoterica. One thing that's worth doing,
 though, is to wrap for a max height of two, and such that all the
 connections (except possibly the last end of a given signal) are at the
 same height. So, if A B C and D are to be connected together, you
 connect A to B, then C to D (thus all at the lower level), then put the
 connection of B to C at a higher level. This dramatically cuts down on
 the amount you have to *unwrap* to fix something. Avoid situations which
 cross the height boundary, because then you have to keep unwrapping
 stuff you'd rather not, to expose the buried lower side.
 If you are wrapping by hand, you can be assured that you *will* make
 mistakes and have to fix something.
 I predict you will also find that you are really sick of wire-wrap long
 before you are done. These days, PCBs are inexpensive, and less error
 prone (in the sense that you almost always end up with exactly the
 connections in the netlist). OTOH, connectors are expensive and hard to
 reuse when soldered to a PCB. So you've got to be really confident of
 your netlist.
 You might consider investing in a tool where you pull the trigger to do
 the wrap. You'll probably get a more consistent result, and
 significantly fewer repetitive motion issues.
 Hope that helps!
         Vince