Hi
Sure sounds like a thermal limit switch. It could also
be a Poly-Fuse.
As for voltage of the transformer, if it is bad, one can
still determine the ratio by cutting the wires off with
a single cut per turn and then count the wires for the
primary and secondary. One does have to watch out if there
are taps, other than center tap.
Dwight
>From: "Vintage Computer Festival" <vcf(a)siconic.com>
>
>
>So after beating the shit out of this stupid TI power supply (none of your
>suggestions worked, thanks) I come to find that it does have an internal
>fuse and that it is complete intact. Wonderful. This thing is shot
>beyond repair at this point. It wasn't intended to ever be opened
>apparently.
>
>Anyway, hopefully I can figure out what this pile of garbage was supposed
>to be putting out. Of course, there are no markings on the housing of the
>transformer.
>
>There is an IC in here. It's inline with the hot side of the input
>voltage. The markings are thusly:
>
>UMI EI
>X25 150(degree symbol)C
>2.5A 250V~
>
>A varistor?
>
>Anyway, this is a heap of junk now.
>
>--
>
>Sellam Ismail Vintage Computer Festival
>------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>International Man of Intrigue and Danger http://www.vintage.org
>
>[ Old computing resources for business || Buy/Sell/Trade Vintage Computers ]
>[ and academia at www.VintageTech.com || at http://marketplace.vintage.org ]
>
>
On Dec 19 2004, 15:07, Glen Goodwin wrote:
> Okay, so can someone tell me why -- suddenly -- a whois on my
> domain name -- acme-sales.net -- does not show any of my contact
> information? It did before, but something has changed.
Er, it does for me:
$ whois -h whois.opensrs.netacme-sales.net
Registrant:
ACME Enterprises of Orlando
6192 Edgewater Drive
Orlando, FL 32810
US
Domain name: ACME-SALES.NET
Administrative Contact:
Goodwin, Glen (email addr here)
(4 lines postal address here)
(phone number here)
Technical Contact:
(same 6 lines here)
Registration Service Provider:
Infinitum Technologies, domains(a)servercove.com
407-481-2434
407-481-2379 (fax)
http://www.servercove.com
This company may be contacted for domain login/passwords,
DNS/Nameserver changes, and general domain support questions.
Registrar of Record: TUCOWS, INC.
Record last updated on 26-Aug-2004.
Record expires on 22-Sep-2005.
Record created on 22-Sep-2003.
Domain servers in listed order:
NS2.ZIGIO.COM 66.193.174.19
NS1.ZIGIO.COM 66.193.174.18
Domain status: ACTIVE
$
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
On Dec 19 2004, 12:32, Pierre Gebhardt wrote:
> does anybody know, how much memory the 11/24 can take ?
> I heard something about 1 MB, others say 4 MB somewhere on the web.
Yes, I'm a bit confused...
> Currently, it's configured with 1 MB.
A basic 11/24 processor uses 22-bit addressing but a Unibus uses 18-bit
addressing and therefore can address up to 256KB; the top four bits of
address are therefore dropped by the MMU in a basic 11/24. If it's
fitted with a Unibus Map (KT24, M7134, which also replaces the M9312
bootstrap card) then an 11/24 can use 22-bit addressing, on an extended
Unibus, giving it a 4MB address space. It does this by feeding the
output of the MMU through 31 mapping registers which provide
relocation, so at any given moment you can actually only address 31
pages, each of 4KW (8KB), plus the I/O page; you need to re-program the
mapping registers or the MMU to access the whole 22-bit range.
I don't know where the 1MB limit comes from, that would be a 20-bit
address range.
> Furthermore, does a DELUA - Card properly work in it ?
> There's only the card, the bulkhead assembly is missing, I would have
to build it by myself...
Yes, that should work.
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
Hello all,
does anybody know, how much memory the 11/24 can take ?
I heard something about 1 MB, others say 4 MB somewhere on the web. Yes, I'm a bit confused...
Currently, it's configured with 1 MB.
Furthermore, does a DELUA - Card properly work in it ?
There's only the card, the bulkhead assembly is missing, I would have to build it by myself...
Pierre
__________________________________________________________
Mit WEB.DE FreePhone mit hoechster Qualitaet ab 0 Ct./Min.
weltweit telefonieren! http://freephone.web.de/?mc=021201
Howdy all,
I have two Macs, a Mac IIsi and 7200, I would like to get rid of. Does
anyone have any recommendation for a Mac collectors group that might
have some individuals interested in these machines? Listings for these
machines on both Ebay and Vintage Marketplace have yeilded no takers.
Thanks,
-- Michael
1972 Univac 1100 manual
Analog computer Programming Patch Panel
Motorola MC68HC11 Evaluation Board
Tektronix manuals in German, French, Japanese and English
HP 9000 800/900 memory
DEC OS/78 manual
InfaRed Heat Gun
See <http://search.ebay.com/_W0QQgotopageZ1QQsassZrigdonj>
Bob,
On Thu Dec 9, 2004, you wrote:
> Its kinda odd how these terminals 'wake-up' with the text input
> directed to the graphical display rather than the alpha display layer.
That shouldn't happen unless the Keyboard Interface PCA is strapped for
"compatibility mode." Open the unit, pull the Keyboard PCA, and check the
DIP switches at the top of the card. Switches P and Q should be set to 0
(closed) for normal operation.
With both closed, the terminal should power up in alpha text mode. Then it
may be switched to graphics text via an escape sequence or by the keyboard
TEXT key, as desired.
(I have an HP 2647A. P and/or Q are set to emulate a Textronix graphics
terminal.)
-- Dave
I just recently got an HP25. I like it this much (1E99++).
I am putting together an applications pack of sorts that I will
be able to make available as a PDF. I have 4 programs so far,
Do any of you have/use the HP25 calculator? Do you have an
HP25 programs you'd like to see in print?
Send programs off list: ron.hudson at sbcglobal dot net
All programs will be added. I have the HP25 applications
book, let's not duplicate anything there.
>That is almost certainly vacuum fluorescent. There are a lot of such
>displays that use the same kind of seven-segment number formation you
>commonly see with LEDs.
Yes, I did more digging and found a web site specializing in vintage
calculators, and it had a full discussion on the different types of
displays... and yes, it does appear that I have Vacuum Fluorescent
Display Tubes. This was reaffirmed with a closer inspection (with the aid
of a flashlight) and each of the segments appears to be an individual
tube (you can see the curves of the front as well as the typical peaked
top).
I've yet to open it to see if they are socketed or soldered... I figured
I'd leave that until I new more about the technology and if the tubes are
repairable, or if I can get the correct replacement part.
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
Hi again Guys,
Had a VT-180 show up on my doorstep last week, and knowing another
local collector who had one in "unknown condition", I decided to
spend some time working on the two machines.
Good news is that I have both of them working and booting up.
But there are assorted bits and pieces missing, if anyone happens
to have any of these VT-180 parts kicking around, please let me know:
- One machine is missing the drive cable (the data cable from the VT-180
to the RX-180 disk unit)
- One machine is missing the metal back cover/shield for the card cage
- Both machines are missing the plastic shroud which covers the above
mentioned cover/shield and connectors.
- Both machines have "VT-100" nameplates - would like to find the VT-180
nameplates.
- One machine is missing the ESC and '3' keys from the keyboard - this
is a standard VT-100 keyboard, so keys from a VT-100 would also be a
perfect match.
Regards,
Dave
--
dave04a (at) Dave Dunfield
dunfield (dot) Firmware development services & tools: www.dunfield.com
com Vintage computing equipment collector.
http://www.parse.com/~ddunfield/museum/index.html
> Date: Sat, 18 Dec 2004 11:11:26 -0600
> From: "Keys" <jrkeys(a)concentric.net>
> Subject: Who Made/Makes the World Smallest Harddrive
> To: "cctalk@classiccmp" <cctalk(a)classiccmp.org>
>
> IS it IBM? I need one for a museum display we are putting together.
Thanks
>
Toshiba has one less than an inch across that holds 2.5-GB. They also
had another one that was 1.8-inches and held 40-GB.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/3381997.stm
On Dec 17 2004, 13:43, Ashley Carder wrote:
> > Does anyone know what the oldest documented functional computer is
that is
> > connected to the internet?
> ..... and is accessible by others via telnet, etc?
I'd suppose David Gesswein's PDP-8 would be a candidate. I have a
PDP-11/83 called titus running BSD2.11 which is internet-accessible,
and my PDP-8/E has a serial line on a terminal server which is also
internet-accessible, but neither is powered up 24/7.
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
I know this is a bad subject, but I was reading an article about
windows nt and the influence dec had on it. In the article it said
that compaq kept development of windows 2000 up to 1999 on Alphas.
Has anyone here seen it running on an Alpha and do you know if many
people developed software to run on it. I knew they had NT on a lot of
architectures but 2000 is a new one.
Thanks
Dan
I got this email today.
Does anyone in Italy or Europe want a SWTPC 6800 system?
Michael Holley
www.swtpc.com/mholley
----- Original Message -----
From: "Paolo Meyer" <paolo(a)igc.org>
Sent: Friday, December 17, 2004 8:49 AM
Subject: request of info about SWTPC
> Dear friend,
> I was one of the first italian SWTPC users. Now I need more room in my
> apartment so I need to give away some original BOXES and Boards.
>
> Do you know if exist in Europe or at least in Italy someone who can
> be interested in this kind of olds stuff?
>
> Many thanks for your help.
>
> Paolo Meyer
I second the spare parts threat... no need.
As for the cable pinout, I may have it with me (I just flew into Seattle from Virginia for the holidays). If I don't then I can email the connection scheme when I get back after the 2nd of January. I detailed not only the external cable, but the internal cable to make the internal drive a double density.
I can send iPDS disks after I get back on the 2nd also.
I'm with Dave, no need to replace the internal drive. Leave all the hardware as-is for now. The double density is the controller - not the drive.
best regards, Steve Thatcher
I saw an ebay auction about a vaxbrick 4000-50. What is a vaxbrick
4000-50? I googled and didn't find much information. I'd guess that it
uses NVAX cpu. But, what is the the clock frequency, and how big is
the cache? What memory options does it support?
vax, 9000
> Does anyone know what the oldest documented functional computer is that is
> connected to the internet?
..... and is accessible by others via telnet, etc?
Ashley
>From the most recent 'Computer Collector' newsletter
(http://news.computercollector.com):
> Early Nov., 2004: At the recent VCF 7.0 event, Tim Robinson displayed
> Meccano versions of Charles Babbage's Difference Engine and Vannevar
> Bush's Differential Analyzer (http://www.meccano.us).
It's nice to see Evan has mentioned this lovely Differential Analyser,
and I am sorry I missed seeing it (thanks especially to Erik Klein for
his nice photos of it, http://www.vintage-computer.com/vcf7.shtml, which
first alerted me to its having been there).
Many years ago (1980) I made myself a simple two-integrator Differential
Analyser, which worked on exactly the same principle. I was inspired by
the Meccano machine which was on display at the Museum of Transport and
Technology in Auckland - this was one of a number of similar machines
made in the '30s - and found a construction article in the Amateur
Scientist column of Scientific American.
I was wondering whether anyone here with '70s issues of SciAm might be
able to make a copy, or at least give a definite date for it. It would
have been in the early-to-mid '70s, certainly before '78.
Thanks, and if anyone still hasn't seen Tim's machine, go to
www.meccano.us and prepare to be amazed.
(Sellam, give up on that TI thingy and go buy a Meccano set)
--
Lawrence Wilkinson lawrence(a)ljw.me.uk
Ph +44(0)1869-811059 http://www.ljw.me.uk
>
>Message: 9
>Date: Thu, 16 Dec 2004 20:40:23 +0000
>From: cvendel(a)att.net
>Subject: Vintage Edison Recorder...
>To: cctech(a)classiccmp.org
>
>
>This is OT, however,
>
> If anyone is into historical items, this is something you should have a
gander at:
>
>
>http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=38029&item=229457049
0&rd=1
>
>
>True piece of early Edison history there!
>
>
>Curt
>
Wow! OT or not, this is great!
Thank you,
Robert Greenstreet
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
Hi,
Dear people, I do apologise if my attitude came across that "I'm gonna rip this apart for spares if I can't fix it", or if I came across aggressive. It was not my intent to antagonise, nor was it my desire to induce sympathy. Unfortunately the written word often lacks the character and nuances of speech.
So, let me rephrase....
I purchased an old Intel MDS Series-4, specificaly for spare parts for my operating MDS Series4. The advertised unit has a memory error, but the rest of it checks out fine. My preference is to try and fix the broken unit. However, should my main unit have a problem I can always use the busted one to be a donor. If anyone knows exactly what chip 0000:8001 refers to (when doing a RAM test), then I will replace the offending component and have this unit fully operational. Which will make me a happy chappy.
When I went to collect the unit the seller also said I could have the 225 unit. I spent a lot of time cleaning dirt and mud out of the 225 and then searched the internet for information. My intent was, and still is, to get this old beast running as good as they day it was made. If it wasn't, then I would of not bothered to take the unit or search for info on it, or come to this forum for advice.
My comment, regarding "using it for spares" merely means it will be put away, somewhere safe and sound with all my other old stuff - some of which I have had to use for donor chips to get some SBC and other boards operational. It would indeed be a sad, sad day that I would need to pull it apart for bits. Once again, I apologise if my comments caused you angst.
Now, back to the 225 issue. Yes, the disk drive array is a blue-box, twin-floppy unit that sits atop the main unit. The main unit has the two-board set that is required to run this double-density drive array. I have contacted the seller to ensure there isn't a cable left behind. Hopefully he has it still and that will be great. If not, I am more than happy to wait for pin-outs and, once supplied, I will make the cable. The other blue-box is the expansion chasis that sits under the main unit to give it a few more slots. I haven't powered up or even cleaned the disk-drive or expansion unit yet. They'll be done during the week. In the interim, I'm reading through the pdf files that you have kindly pointed me to. As per your advice, I won't be pulling apart the unit or do anything untoward until I get more information regarding boot disks and cable pinouts.
The iPDS was a freebie given to me when I purchased my initial MDS Series4 some years ago. I have found very little information on this unit and therefore it has been set aside and I thought, "why not ask about the iPDS while I'm here" and it's good to see that there are some people out there that can help me get this unit operational. Other than that, I have no idea about this box - though I'd dearly love to get it going.
I do have an old 486 DOS machine with 3 and 5 inch diskette drives, so I can get the iPDS disks done on that machine.
My aim, with all this old stuff is to fix it as my main task. I don't collect things (like chip collectors) for looks. I like and want (almost have an inbuilt urge) to make it work and I love to have them all operational. I have fixed and have operational my old SC/MP, 6800 Micro Module, Central Data 2650, AIM65, STD bus and various Intel SBC systems - however, the old TI99/189 system (and a few others) have eluded me for quite some time, but I won't give up on them. Furthermore, I have an inventory of old processors, memory and peripheral chips and, using the Series4 with ICE85B, I build 8085 systems. I am hoping the 225 gets operational so I can do some stuff with the 8080 chip - like do some old S100 work and repairs on an SBC80/24. I'd love to build an 8080 system also.
So please, don't think of me as a destroyer of old systems. I'm a preserver, who should of used a better phrase than "used for spare parts". :)
I do hope you accept my apology, and I am extremely grateful for your assistance and advice.
seeyuzz
river
Hi,
Thanks for the reply. I went and loaded all those docos regarding the Series 2XX. Great stuff.
I cleaned up the connectors to the IO board and now the floppy drive engages upon reset. I ran the diags and all system work and even the floppy drive passed its tests with a scratch disk. However, I get a disk error when I boot the ISIS-II system disk. I tried a few other disks and the ones that are double-density all give a "disk error", yet the single-density ones just say "not bootable".
So, I guess I need to find a single density 8-inch ISIS-II boot disk. I can't use the one from my Series-4 'cos it uses 5-1/4 disks. THe unit also came with a dual disk drive array - yet another amazingly heavy blue box, and an expansion chasis. It appears that there are no cables to attach the disk array. The 225 has the two disk controller cards in the chasis and the cables are routed to the J8/J9 connectors, but I beleive there is a cable that I require to attach from these connectors to the disk array. I'd love to get the 225 fully operational 'cos it came with the ICE-80 (which I cannot use on the Series-4, which has an ICE-85B), ICE-51 and ICE-49. I especially want to use the ICE-80 so I can do some 8080 development (may as well use the stock of chips I got).
I'm gonna see if I can pull out the single-density drive in the 225 and put in one of the double density drives from the array. However, before I do that, does anyone know the cable pinouts - 'cos I might try and make a cable first. Or does anyone know where I can get a cable?
In the final run, if I can't do anything much with it, I can always use the parts for spares and other stuff.
Oh, final question... I also have an iPDS that's been waiting for a boot disk. Can I use my Series-4 ISIS-II disks in this unit? Will it boot, or is this unit doomed to be pulled apart for spares also?
seeyuzz
river
>Are you sure it's a LED display? That sounds more like behavior I would
>expect of a vacuum fluorescent display. If an LED really is doing that,
>the problem is with the electronics, not the diplay.
I can't be sure. I didn't think it was an LED (the unit is from around
1970 or so), but when I looked at it a little while ago, it looked kind
of like LED segments behind the plastic lens.
They glow a bluish green if that is any help. They don't look like any
LED out today, that's for sure. I've never knowingly seen a vacuum
fluorescent display, so I can't compare.
If this is one, is it a problem that is fixable?
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
I recently obtained a Votrax PSS which did not include the power supply
or the manual. Thanks to Robert Stek's informative post
(http://www.classiccmp.org/pipermail/cctech/2003-February/010608.html)
on this list in feb '03, I am in the process of constructing a power
supply for it. However, I still need a copy of the manual, so I can
figure out how to set the various modes of the device, and control the
AY-3-8910 audio generator chip.
If anyone has the manual for the Votrax Personal Sound System and has
some means to scan or digitize it (a digital camera will work) can they
send me a copy of the images? It would be much appreciated.
Jonathan Gevaryahu
lord_nightmare_(a)t_users.sf.net
(remove the _@t_ and replace with @ to demangle the address)
My father has a very much loved Panasonic 805 calculator.
However, in recent months, one of the LED segments has begun to
misbehave. It is getting steadily worse. What happens is, in general the
segment is dim, and once a segment lights, it doesn't seem to turn back
off until you clear the calculation. As a result, very quickly, the one
segment just stays on 8.
Since this is the ones column, it effects all calculation displays (the
calculation itself works fine, it always knows what the number should be,
it is just the display of that number that doesn't work).
Does anyone have any repair info on this calculator? Schematics or
otherwise? I'd love to be able to open it and replace the segment, or
whatever may be misfiring to cause it to display wrong. He hates to give
it up, but he is finding it increasingly hard to use.
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
I received the following email:
I have two DEC 72 inch high racks.
They contain some custom electronics (useless to anyone else) and power
supplies. The racks are in good condition.
These racks are available for pickup only in eastern PA.
If anyone is interested contact me off-list.
Jay
Ashley Carder <wacarder(a)usit.net> wrote:
> Does anyone know what the oldest documented functional computer is that is
> connected to the internet?
> ..... and is accessible by others via telnet, etc?
Hmm, would probably have to be a FOONLY running TENEX or something of that
era, I don't think VAXen running 4BSD quite cut it. For the record I run
MicroVAX III's with 4.3BSD-Quasijarus, but I really hope that I'm not the
oldest and that there are some people running plain 4.3 or even 4.2 on an
11/7xx connected to the net. Hell, since mine are all MicroVAX III's,
even someone with a MicroVAX II will beat me. But then I will probably be
putting together a new router soon and that one will have a MicroVAX II
CPU, so at least I'll have that.
MS
Dave,
I've got boot disks for TRSDOS 2a and P&T CP/M 2.2m if you're interested. Reply to me off list and we get something going.
Gary Fisher
C/O
Tristone Capital Inc.
Suite 1800, 335 - 8th Avenue SW
Calgary, Alberta T2P 1C9
B: 403.303.8657
F: 403.294.9543
E:gfisher@tristonecapital.com
This e-mail and any attachments may contain confidential and privileged information. If you are not the intended recipient, please notify the sender immediately by return e-mail, delete this e-mail and destroy any copies. Any dissemination or use of this information by a person other than the intended recipient is unauthorized and may be illegal. Unless otherwise stated, opinions expressed in this e-mail are those of the author and are not endorsed by the author's employer.
Your original message:
Message: 28
Date: Fri, 17 Dec 2004 07:20:11 -0500
From: Dave Dunfield <dave04a(a)dunfield.com>
Subject: LF: TRS-80 Model II boot disk
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Message-ID: <20041217122010.XCTJ5758.orval.sprint.ca(a)smtp.sprint.ca>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
Hi Guys,
Have a TRS-80 Model II which I am planning to restore (probably
get started over the holidays) - but one thing I am going to
need is a boot disk. Anyone out there got a working Model II
system? (This is the big "business" version with the single-
sided 8" drive).
Regards,
Dave
PS: Also still looking for a Cromemco System-3 boot disk.
--
dave04a (at) Dave Dunfield
dunfield (dot) Firmware development services & tools: www.dunfield.com
com Vintage computing equipment collector.
http://www.parse.com/~ddunfield/museum/index.html
Hi Guys,
Have a TRS-80 Model II which I am planning to restore (probably
get started over the holidays) - but one thing I am going to
need is a boot disk. Anyone out there got a working Model II
system? (This is the big "business" version with the single-
sided 8" drive).
Regards,
Dave
PS: Also still looking for a Cromemco System-3 boot disk.
--
dave04a (at) Dave Dunfield
dunfield (dot) Firmware development services & tools: www.dunfield.com
com Vintage computing equipment collector.
http://www.parse.com/~ddunfield/museum/index.html
At 14:00 16/12/2004 -0500, you wrote:
>Hello, all:
>
> If anyone has access to an Altair 8800 (the original model) and can
>measure the toggle switch handles, I would greatly appreciate it. I need the
>length of the handle from the top of the threaded collar to the end of the
>handle.
>
> Thanks a lot.
>
>Rich
Hi Rich,
Since no-one else has repsonded, I uncrated my 8800 and measured the switches.
This measurement is difficult, because the top of the collar does not protude
through the front panel, and in fact does not come all the way through to the
face of the panel.
I measured the switches by holding a toothpick against the top of the collar,
and straight out beside the switch - marking the top of the switch, and then
measuring the toothpick. Measurements are from the collar to the furthest out
edge of the dome at the end of the switch handle.
Both switch types (two position and three position) are exactly the same length.
I measured the two position switch by positioning it 1/2 way (straight out) .
And the measurements are (drum roll please):
11mm (7/16 inches)
Regards,
Dave
--
dave04a (at) Dave Dunfield
dunfield (dot) Firmware development services & tools: www.dunfield.com
com Vintage computing equipment collector.
http://www.parse.com/~ddunfield/museum/index.html
To the half dozen+ listees who responded to my listing this computer as available in November: The guy who had the Eagle has certainly moved out of his apartment by now - as it is well after the first of the month. I presume the box went to computer heaven and we were not able to rescue it. I guess that's the way things go sometimes. Thanks to all. Bill.
________________________________________________________________
Juno Gift Certificates
Give the gift of Internet access this holiday season.
http://www.juno.com/give
I'm looking for an M9312 bootstrap ROM for an RX01 drive. I believe the DEC number on the chip is 753A9. Does anyone have one of these that they would be willing to get rid of? I have other M9312 ROMs to trade.
Thanks,
Ashley
I got the last box of junk from my brother, and just inventoried
the floppies, going by the labels. I likely have errors in
sidedness/density but they were all made on one of two CP/M
machines; I have one here and the other (my father's) is still
in Mass and I can get it if necessary.
I have no idea whats actually on them or which ones are readable,
that come snext after I power up the cards. I've gone through
the chassis already and it's fine. I'll probably do smoke
tests today.
There's some good stuff I think. BDS C, CBBS from 81 (sources
plus BBS files), Stackworth FORTH, JRT Pascal, some other
Pascal, Aztec C, FORTRAN IV (likely TDL/Xitan), F80, M80, L80,
etc (m'soft) basic compiler (ugh) old DBASE, etc...
I'll make everything available ASAP.
Diskette label Media Location
?Copy Teletek CP/M? SN 2-301-01089, FDC-I, with VDISK, & WS 3.3 MAILMERGE SSDD Grey binder Dad's
Microsoft CP/M Basic Compiler vers. 530 copy SN16395 SSSD Grey binder Dad's
COM (not BASIC) games #2, Adventure SSDD Grey binder Dad's
SUPER-CALC SH=microshell SSDD Grey binder Dad's
CHESS SSSD Grey binder Dad's
ZIP 2.4 SSSD Grey binder Dad's
Dbase example files sysgened DSDD Teletek format DSDD Grey binder Dad's
(TJ) ASM86 GENCMD MODEM7 STRIPCMD ZSID TRACE+HIST UTL SID ASM MAC LINK L80 M80 SSSD Grey binder Dad's.
AZTEC 'C' side #1 ver 1.05g #6425 SSSD Grey binder Dad's
AZTEC 'C' side #2 ver 1.05g #6425 SSSD Grey binder Dad's
FORTRAN IV ver 3.05 copy from ser# 0199; also marked L80 M80 SSSD? Flippy disk! Beige binder ?CP/M Utilities? Casing has serious warpage; heat or time, media looks OK.
PMATE 3.02 WordStar 3.00 Beige binder ?CP/M Utilities? Tomj
F80 L80 M80 DSDD Beige binder ?CP/M Utilities? Dad's
Some str??? .COM? DSDD Beige binder ?CP/M Utilities? Dads; may be blank.
Perfect Writer Speller PMATE 1-84 SSSD Beige binder ?CP/M Utilities? ?
NEW ADVENTURE OTHELLO NO SYSTEM SSSD Beige binder ?CP/M Utilities?
DUU & NICE.DOC ?shouldn't be anything else? NEW TELINK.C (Lattice ver.) MYCHESS SSSD Beige binder ?CP/M Utilities?
Backup disk for Telink C Sources (TJ) DEC 82 SSDD Beige binder ?CP/M Utilities?
C' BDC [I think means BDS] 1.45 WORKING Telink Xtelink SSDD Beige binder ?CP/M Utilities?
An inte??um copy of Telink.C only SSDD Beige binder ?CP/M Utilities?
Aztec work disk SSSD Beige binder ?CP/M Utilities?
CBBS v3.5 BOTH SIDES SSSD flippy disk! Blue binder, ?Originals?
Stackworth FORTH SPEED.COM SS?? Blue binder, ?Originals?
WS 1.01 & 3.00 PMATE 3.0 DSDD Blue binder, ?Originals?
JRT Pascal ORIGINAL [handwritten] SSSD Blue binder, ?Originals?
BULLETIN BOARD SSDD Blue binder, ?Originals? Printout of DIR; 5/10/81. CBBS sources and BBS files
BBS DOC FILES SSDD Blue binder, ?Originals?
DBASE 2.4 SRC SSSD Blue binder, ?Originals?
DWS ? NWS v1.01 SS?? Blue binder, ?Originals? WordStar
Little Fido's Bugger ? VB3 DSSD Brown Dysan box, ?Little FIDO CP/M Sources? Bugger for SSM VB3 card
Fido's Double Sided System Disk 3/15/82 DSSD Brown Dysan box, ?Little FIDO CP/M Sources?
Fido's Double Sided System Disk #2 2/14/82 DSSD Brown Dysan box, ?Little FIDO CP/M Sources?
FIDO's CCP SSSD Brown Dysan box, ?Little FIDO CP/M Sources? CP/M CCP replacement program; see ?Little Fido ? software binder
CP/M 2.21 for FIDO working BIOS disk BACKUP 4/6/82 1/24/82 SSSD Brown Dysan box, ?Little FIDO CP/M Sources?
VB3 BIOS 4/6/82 27 April 82 SSSD Brown Dysan box, ?Little FIDO CP/M Sources?
Fido's System Disk #2 1/24/82 SSSD Brown Dysan box, ?Little FIDO CP/M Sources?
Doc files SSSD Brown Dysan box, ?Little FIDO CP/M Sources?
Little Fido's system disk 29 Aug 82 SSSD Brown Dysan box, ?Little FIDO CP/M Sources?
Fido's system disk 62K 2.21 7/10/81 3/22/82 DSSD Brown Dysan box, ?Little FIDO CP/M Sources?
Little Fido's System Disk Double Sided 11 Aug 82 DSSD Brown Dysan box, ?Little FIDO CP/M Sources?
IBUG, PARSE, RLOCATR2 12/20/81 SSSD Brown Dysan box, ?Little FIDO CP/M Sources?
BDS 'C' 1.41a as of 1/21/81 see 141.DOC SSSD Dysan box, no markings
C' sources 5/15/81 BAUD SSSD Dysan box, no markings
BDS 'C' 1.41 Diskbug Makedb Zapload Stripcmd SSSD Dysan box, no markings Has Microft Inc sticker
BDS C 1.41 for TRS80 2 of 2 SSSD Dysan box, no markings
BDS C 1.41 for the TRS *) 5/20/81 1 of 2 SSSD Dysan box, no markings
Algol SSSD Dysan box, no markings Huh?!
Stackworth FORTH TJ 4/30/81 SSSD Dysan box, no markings
Pascal SSSD Dysan box, no markings
INDEX EPROM SSSD Dysan box, no markings
Modem 2.17 etc 11/30/81 SSSD Dysan box, no markings
Development System COM files ASM LINK etc --- 2/18/81 disk #1 SSSD Dysan box, no markings
Dev. Sys. COM files 2/18/81 Disk #2 SSSD Dysan box, no markings
Dev. Sys. COM files 2/18/81 Disk #3 recopied 5/26/81 SSSD Dysan box, no markings
FIDO formatter 7/10 FIDO copy 7/10 Sysgen 7/30 7/9/81 SSSD Dysan box, no markings
COPY (disc copy utility) for FIDO CP/M 2.21 7/11/81 SSSD Dysan box, no markings
Old IMDOS disk, has DIABLO printer driver SSSD Dysan box, no markings
I'm looking for a DECstation 5000, a fairly recent and marginally
classic MIPS workstation DEC sold in the early 1990s. (Well,
it's classic to me for nostalgia reasons, but I won't get into
that). I'm specifically looking for a 5000/133 or /150, but
really any 5000 will do.
I'd be happy to pay shipping and a reasonable price (reasonable being
something in the < $50 range, since that seems to be the going rate),
and/or I have a MicroVAX 3100 (desktop case, 16MB RAM, 1GB disk,
8 serial lines) I'd be happy to trade.
If anyone has a lead on one, please let me know!
-Seth
--
"It looks just like a Telefunken U47! Seth Morabito
You'll love it." - Frank Zappa sethm(a)loomcom.com
Those keyswitches are actually contacts that need a special tool for
replacement. I used to do hundreds of them at Dataterm Inc. They still have the
contacts and inserts for those keybds.Give them a call @ 781-938-1010 or e-mail -
service(a)dataterm.com
Hello, all:
If anyone has access to an Altair 8800 (the original model) and can
measure the toggle switch handles, I would greatly appreciate it. I need the
length of the handle from the top of the threaded collar to the end of the
handle.
Thanks a lot.
Rich
Marty Greene,
There are others of us who have TI 990/systems in storage. I have 2 990/10 systems. DX-10 OS with 10M cartridge (CDC?)drives. Mine came from a Paradyne Corp Modem Analysis system tracking 300 Paradyne 2400 Baud multi-drop circuits on an 800 hz subcarrier over dedicated lines. So I have lots of serial ports...Each modem had data and an analysis port.
Sincerely
Larry Truthan
I may also have a Xerox Sigma diagnostics tape and or journal somewhere in the basement.
eight bit controllers to look for:
Seagate ST-05X Xt to IDE
Seagate ST-11M MFM
Seagate ST-11R RLL
SMS/OMTI 5520 MFM
SMS/OMTI 5527 RLL
Western Digital WD XT140 IDE note: separate cables - 2 drives
Western Digital WD XT150R IDE note: 1 drive only
Western Digital WD XTGEN MFM
Western Digital WD XTGEN2 MFM best interleave I think -0 bigger capacity
Western Digital WD XTGENR RLL
Western Digital WD 1002-WX1 MFM slow interleave
Western Digital WD 1002-27X RLL slow interleave
Western Digital WD 1004-WX1 MFM better interleave bigger capacity
Western Digital WD 1004-27X RLL better interleave
Hope this helps.
Paxton
At 02:55 PM 12/13/2004, you wrote:
>the only sound physical reason for fractions is cooking... the general populace is so technically illiterate that is really doesn't make a difference whether things are in fractions or decimal. They really don't have a clue anyway. When was the last time you heard any clerk actually count change out or someone realize that 1/4 cup is 1/2 of a 1/2 cup...
But measuring by volume isn't necessarily the best method, either,
particularly for flours that vary in volume depending on how long
they've been sitting, the weather, or whether they've been sifted.
They teach fractions like that in third or fourth grade.
There's no excuse.
- John
P.S. Watch for me on the Food Network's "The Next Food Network Star" contest.
>From: "Paul Koning" <pkoning(a)equallogic.com>
---snip---
>
>Some of this discussion reminds me of the "arguments" why the metric
>system is inferior to the US system of measures.
Contrary to what Tom Jennings states in a later post, there
are sound physical reasons for using fractional systems
when dealing with the physical world. I'm not defending
the English system that is a hodgepodge of poorly
related measurement standards. The only reason we have
a decimal system is because of the number of fingers we
have. Hardly a sound reason to squeeze physical relations
into. One wonders why there are 2.5mm screws when the
decimal system works so well.
If we'd had 8 finger, things would have been so much
easier to work with. 8 is 2 cubed and one hand would
be 4 or 2 squared. These both fit nicely into the physical
world were squares cubes are most often worked with.
Even logs would have made more sense under a base 8 system.
>
>I don't actually know where 50 and 60 Hz came from, nor 100 and 115
>and 220 and 240 volts. There may be some ancient justification in the
>tinkerings of various 19th century engineers, but it seems to me it
>makes most sense simply to view them as random numbers.
I've been trying to find some actual history on the 50/60
thing on the net but so far, all I was able to find was
that cell phones are frying our brains. My understanding
was that it was a balance between efficient generation
and efficient transformers. The voltages were mainly to
control line loss. In the US, most people live close to
their distribution transformer and line loss is not that
high at 110-115V.
Dwight
>
> paul
>
>
On all of my replaced SCSI drives, I use SCA adaptors and SCA drives- much
easier to get nowadays than 50 pin models, and also newer. Any drive will
work-they do not need special firmware
The deal for SGI sleds is as follows-
The 50 pin cable goes into the 50 pin narrow SCSI socket on the adaptor- self
explanitory
The power cable will often need to be teased out a little longer (at least on
Indigo2, I don't have my Indigo sled at hand)
For the SCSI ID cable (the 6-pin bit) you will need a VOM/DMM. One side will
have a bank of 3 wires, the other will have 1 wire. On the adaptor, there will
be 3 pins wired together -> these are ground, connect to the single pin side.
The other wires set the SCSI ID based on which slot in the Indigo the drive
is installed
If you choose to hardwire the drive (not as neat, but a definite
possibility), remember that on IRISes the host adapter is ID 0, so the first (system) disk
is ID 1- and so on. Most computers have the host adapter as ID #7, but not
Siggys.
Best of luck to you, they are very neat machines, with a slick UI (Indigo
Magic)- For IRIX 5.3 be sure to get the free IDO (Development Option-compilers
and headers, available from www.sgi.com)
Scott Quinn
I seem to have spoken too quickly, put my foot in my mouth, and in the
process created a synthetic monster and slandered Even. I was unaware of what was
going on. Please consider this my apology.
>From: "Vintage Computer Festival" <vcf(a)siconic.com>
>
>On Wed, 15 Dec 2004, Michael Sokolov wrote:
>
>> Vintage Computer Festival <vcf(a)siconic.com> wrote:
>>
>> > Because there are three conductors sockets on the end plug and I don't
>> > know what is supposed to be on each one.
>>
>> Well, 20 VAC between the ends, don't know about the middle.
>
>Ok, that's good information, but for good measure it would be nice to know
>what the voltage is across the middle pin and either end pin.
>
>Thanks!
>
Hi Sellam
Do all the pins show low ohms to each other? It might
be a center tap or even just a ground lead that doesn't
carry current. Since you have the box open, you should be
able to see where all the wires go.
Dwight
Hi Bob
There used to be a place around here called Motion Industries.
I believe they changed there name but they were a nation wide
company and had branches across the nation. They carried
all the standard cogged belts and such. I'm sure they'd have
what you need.
They might still have the same name or something similar.
It has been a few years since I used them ( like about 10 or so ).
Dwight
>From: "Bob Shannon" <bshannon(a)tiac.net>
>
>Are parts available to repair a HP 2671G printer?
>
>I'd like to replace the geared belt that drives the print-head.
>I'm not at all sure that the head can be removed from this belt
>so I may be talking about a complete head and belt assembly
>which I'd assume is unobtainium.
>
>If its just a matter of attaching the head to a replacement
>belt, does anyone have the specs or a source for the belt?
>
>Apparently whatever these belts are made of gets old in a
>bad way, they become sticky and brittle, both are bad for
>drive belts.
>
>Given this, I'm assuming even a new-old stock drive belt would
>not be servicable.
>
Can anybody tell me if a "proper" (i.e. true IBM compatible) CGA (CGA, not
MDA, EGA or VGA) monitor had a male or female connector?
I know it had a DB-9 with approximately this pinout
1,2 Ground
3 Red
4 Green
5 Blue
6 Intensify
7 N/C
8 Hsync
9 Vsync
All signals are TTL and active high, as I remember.
Anybody in the SF Bay Area got a real CGA monitor that they don't want
anymore?
Thanks,
Bob Armstrong
Tom Jennings, do you have access to the manual on the SSM VB3 video board?
I'd love to get that scanned and into the archives.
Barry Watzman
Watzman(a)neo.rr.com