One more time. Anyone?! Would anyone please have an extra power plug they could sell me for my generic S-100 computer? Somehow mine must have gotten given away with other misc. cords. It's the kind with two sort of oval female prong inputs on the computer end. Anyway, I'd be happy to furnish a picture to anyone who needs to verify. I haven't had it up and running for a couple of years now, and I would like to. Thank you, David
Hi.
Seen this morning on port-vax(a)netbsd.org:
-----
On 2002.09.17 02:46 The Sawyers wrote:
Hey Everyone,
11/750 available in the Chicago Area, far west suburbs.
Full Set of spares, front panel down to the power supplies,
Print Set,
Emulex MASSBUS <-> SMD
2 Fujitsu Eagles ~430 MB each (SMD) (with boot prom)
2 CDC Sabre ~ 1BG each (SMD) (with boot prom)
TU81 (Unibus interface)
Unibus Ethernet
Unibus SCSI
RS232 Multiplexers
Many TU58 Diagnostic Tapes
Installation Manuals, Hardware Manuals .. and more.
The whole machine currently will run on a 120V/20A
circuit. (CPU, TU81, 1 Eagle, and both Sabres)
PLEASE SAVE ME FROM THE DUMPSTER
Please reply to sawyer(a)cbcast.com..
Thanks !
--
tsch??,
Jochen
Homepage: http://www.unixag-kl.fh-kl.de/~jkunz/
Sigh. I really should read what I've written, before I post it. Being in
a
hurry is no good excuse.
I missed out a whole column (the destination address) in the JSRs! And
forgot
to alter the addresses to allow for the different instruction lengths :-(
On Sep 18, 9:05, Pete Turnbull wrote:
> Now if he wanted to write it using a subroutine, and he used the simple
> method:
It should be something like:
7 001000 012701 000110 MOV #'H', R1
8 001004 004537 001100 JSR R5, @#PUT
9 001010 012701 000064 MOV #'4', R1
10 001014 004537 001100 JSR R5, @#PUT
11 001020 012701 000130 MOV #'X', R1
12 001024 004537 001100 JSR R5, @#PUT
:
:
35 001100 105767 177564 PUT: TSTB @#XSR
36 001104 100375 BPL PUT
37 001106 010137 177566 MOV R1, @#XBUF
38 001112 000205 RTS R5
> However, if it were written using relative addressing, ie
8 001004 004567 000070 JSR R5, PUT
9 001010 012701 000064 MOV #'4', R1
10 001014 004567 000060 JSR R5, PUT
:
35 001100 105767 177564 PUT: TSTB @#XSR
Apologies for any confusion.
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
Pierre,
I have a QD32 manual.. if those drives are PA5 variety, then I have manuals
too.. please provide the model numbers.
Will J
_________________________________________________________________
Chat with friends online, try MSN Messenger: http://messenger.msn.com
Hi all,
I'm ready to attach the controller to the backplane of my PDP 11/23 but
before, it would be interesting to set the jumpers correctly.
On the net, I just found jumper descriptions of the QD33, but the jumpers
are different.
Is there anybody who can tell me how to set the jumpers ?
Moreover, the descriptions on the net are a bit confusing.
Several sites say that the QD32 is an E-SMD controller, while other sites
talk of a SMD-Controller ?
So which interface does this controller support ?
And the last thing: 3 big FSD-500 (CDC) drives (9") are waiting to be
connected.
I hope that the QD32 supports E-SMD as I read that these drives are E-SMD
drives...
Same case as to the controller... I can't find any descriptions or manuals
on the net in order to set the jumpers correctly.
Seagate bought CDC at the beginning of the '90 but they didn't answer me.
Thanks alot for any help !
Pierre
--
GMX - Die Kommunikationsplattform im Internet.
http://www.gmx.net
and does anyone know where i could get one? i need to get data off of an
RV02K pak, but lack the drive.
thanks!!
-brian
--
Don't get too bent out of shape, for half the world, Calculus is
incomprehensible until they learn the epsilon-delta proof. After learning
the epsilon-delta proof, it's incomprehensible for most of the other half.
-- George Adkins --
FYI
----- Original Message -----
From: Keys
To: cctech@classiccmp
Sent: Tuesday, September 17, 2002 6:25 PM
Subject: New Finds Today
At auction I got a hp 122A Oscilloscope with a operating/service manual for $12.50 Also got the following items:
- Toshiba T4850CT/500 laptop for $5
- PowerPC 6100/60 for $2
- Apple dot matrix printer model A9M0303 for $2
- Sega Genesis 16-Bit with PowerBase converter attached for $4
- Lots of mice, cables, and other small items.
At auction I got a hp 122A Oscilloscope with a operating/service manual for $12.50 Also got the following items:
- Toshiba T4850CT/500 laptop for $5
- PowerPC 6100/60 for $2
- Apple dot matrix printer model A9M0303 for $2
- Sega Genesis 16-Bit with PowerBase converter attached for $4
- Lots of mice, cables, and other small items.
I recently acquired this through my network of friends
who know I collect "old computer stuff". It's a 2400bps
4-wire leased line modem. Seems to have been manufactured
in 1984. It has a nice case and power supply, that I'll
use for other projects if no one wants it or can make a case
for its preservation. I also have the "Maintenance Information
and Parts Catalog" (First Edition) and a customer troubleshooting
guide.
I seem to recall that there are a couple of modem collectors
on the list. Email if interested.
Bill
Hi,
I've just acquired an old Micromint Sweettalker II card (phoneme based
speech synthesiser for Apple II, based on BYTE '84 design) which is
missing the SSI-263 speech chip. Does anyone have an SSI-263P or
SSI-263AP chip they're interested in selling, or maybe another old
speech card that has one on that I can scavenge?
Thanks!
Ben