On 8/20/22 08:42, Zane Healy via cctalk wrote:
I have to ask, which is tragic? Needing to lookup SA400, or the fact that webpage (from
the Smithsonian), indicates it’s a 3 1/4” drive. That wasn’t typo on my part they say
*three*.
I do have a couple of the 3 1/4" drives and media to match, but they
don't look anything like an SA400.
I have only two memories of the SA400--the first was when a friend who
was a hard-bitten KIM-1 addict got himself a KIMSI and a single-drive
Integrand case to hold it all. I don't recall the S100 controller he
used, but it was based on the WD1771. An SA400 drive completed the
picture. He couldn't get the darned thing to work and turned it over to
me to troubleshoot. It turns out that the big Integrand power supply
transformer was throwing enough AC magnetic field to render the SA400
nearly useless when the drive was inside the box. Outside of the case,
everything worked as expected. Eventually, the solution was to
fabricate some steel shielding around the drive.
The second instance was when work moved to new digs. We had a brand-new
SA400 that was offered to me, because, in the words of the lead disk
engineer, it was garbage. It sat around for a year or two at home, and
then I stuck it into a 5150 PC. In comparison with the Micropolis drives
that we'd been using, he was right. Eventually, an inductor on the tach
board opened up and, after repair, the drive was given away. That
plastic disc-and-follower arrangement was a terrible idea and the guys
at Shugart must have known that.
The guys from Micropolis were rightly proud of their precision-ground
leadscrew technology and pointing out that the sheet-metal construction
was far more precise than the Zamac castings that others were using. It
was also far more expensive. IIRC, our OEM price for a carton of the
1115 drives was about $600 (1978 dollars) each. On the other hand, we
were getting 460KB (77x12x512) on a single-sided disk using GCR and the
WD1781 FDC, all on a Multibus-sized card. That would have been
impossible on an SA400.
The Micropolis drives were so accurate in positioning that we made our
own alignment disks using one mounted on a 1/2" aluminum plate, driving
the leadscrew through a 100:1 precision reduction. These disks were for
field use, so it was acceptable to record tracks at various offsets to
get a good idea of how far from the radial ideal the customer's drives
were. I'm a bit surprised with the call for finding alignment disks,
that this hasn't been done in the hobbyist world. After all, what most
folks rehabilitating drives are interested in is radial alignment. I
doubt that many know how to adjust azimuth.
--Chuck