Hi.
I thought about using the serial connection (which should be enabled
only if the video card is removed).
Thank you for the advice about the battery: usual issue with SGI, Sony
News.... :-)
Unfortunately, the hard disk was been removed before I collected the
workstation.
Could you please share the link to your post on the VCF Forum?
Thank you.
-s
On 30/05/24 11:53, cz via cctalk wrote:
I have one around here somewhere. Sun built two
cables, one was for
the color boards (CGThree and CGFive) and the other was for monochrome
systems (the D15).
In the meantime you can hook a computer to the RS232 port and start
running the thing headless to see what's there. Note, you're going to
have to replace the timekeeper chip (or hack a new battery into it,
there's docs on how I did that 30 years ago). I recommend wiring in a
dual AAA adapter, that way you can replace the batteries every 15 or
so years.
Last time I fired up my three 386i's, two of the power supplies had
blown up and one of the boards would not pass diagnostics. Of the
supplies, one was hopeless so I hacked in a standard PC-AT supply
board and got everything running (you don't NEED the -15 volts, but
heck some ISA board you plug in will want it :-) and I figured out how
to fix the other one by wiring in a new 12 volt kick starter supply to
get the main supply up and running.
I wrote up all of this on the vcf forum. Worth a read.
If it's got a hard disk and it spins I'd recommend hooking it up to a
SCSI adapter and doing a dd image of it first. Then you can figure out
the partitions by whacking away at the image (I did this), then mount
the volumes on another system, grab /etc/passwd, and crack the
passwords in about 4 hours with john or a related tool.
Once up, put it on the public internet and confuse the hell out of
hackers.
Have fun!
CZ
On 5/30/2024 4:59 AM, Stefano Sanna via cctalk wrote:
> Hi.
>
> I recently bought a Sun Microsystems 386i and I discovered (too
> late...) that monitor and keyboard are connected to the same D15
> connector on the back using a "Y" cable (I had experience with other
> Sun workstations, this was first contact with Intel-based hardware).
>
> Unfortunately, I have not such a cable neither I was able to find any
> info on the web about the pinout/wiring; probably it would be
> possible to create the cable from scratch (assuming that no other
> circuitry was inside the original Y cable). Moreover, I discovered
> that there is more than one option for video boards (mono and color):
> therefore, there is more than a single Y cable to connect monitor and
> keyboard.
>
> Looking at the official Sun's hardware list, I found this item:
>
> 630-1621 386i video/keyboard cable
>
> but it does not specify whether it is the mono or the color cable. In
> any case, it seems impossible to buy it on eBay or similar.
>
> Does anybody have some information on how to rebuild it?
>
> Thank you.
> -s