On Sat, 28 Jan 2006 19:09:49 -0600, Jay West" <jwest at classiccmp.org>
wrote:
> Happened to come across this gorgeous triple bay HP rack. It's the
> perfect
> (accurate) type for an HP2000/TSB system. Correct PMU/PDU's, etc.
>
> http://www.alltronics.com/relay_racks.htm
>
> Scroll down about 9/10ths of the way... under heading "triple rack
> cabinets"
>
> http://www.alltronics.com/images/RackZZ.jpg is a bigger picture.
>
> If someone wants a really nice setup for HP gear, this is the right
> one :)
>
> Jay West
>
>
>
If anyone is interested in racks of this type, let me know and I will
put a word in with the local scrapper. I have seen quite a few come
through in the last year that were used for test purposes (racks of
HP test equipment - mostly removed). Most of these go to the
recycler, but so as long as he makes something above scrap he's happy.
Equipment is in Tucson, AZ...
CRC
Yes, we always pick up stuff .... it must be some really special
pub if you are willing to drive round-trip 1100 km for a beer :-)
- Henk.
> -----Original Message-----
> From: cctalk-bounces at classiccmp.org
> [mailto:cctalk-bounces at classiccmp.org] On Behalf Of Richard
> Sent: maandag 30 januari 2006 8:55
> To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts
> Subject: Re: Road Trips Re: (no subject) [now RTTY equipment
> available]
>
>
> In article
> <447524F844B59D48B8F7AE7F560935EE02CF2657 at OVL-EXBE01.ocevenlo.
> oce.net>,
> "Gooijen, Henk" <henk.gooijen at oce.com> writes:
>
> > And every year we make a trip to the UK, and stay at Pete's
> in York.
> > That also counts for some 1100 km round trip.
>
> Ah, but are you picking up equipment or just pints of beer at
> the local pub? :-)
> --
> "The Direct3D Graphics Pipeline"-- code samples, sample chapter, FAQ:
> <http://www.xmission.com/~legalize/book/>
> Pilgrimage: Utah's annual demoparty
> <http://pilgrimage.scene.org>
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Edward and I drove from The Netherlands, through Belgium and
France to Italy (round trip some 2200 km) for two 11/70's and
3 RM03's and a bit of small stuff ...
And every year we make a trip to the UK, and stay at Pete's
in York. That also counts for some 1100 km round trip.
- Henk.
> -----Original Message-----
> From: cctalk-bounces at classiccmp.org
> [mailto:cctalk-bounces at classiccmp.org] On Behalf Of Doc Shipley
> Sent: maandag 30 januari 2006 2:59
> To: General at mdrconsult.com; On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts
> Subject: Re: Road Trips Re: (no subject) [now RTTY equipment
> available]
>
> Richard wrote:
> > How many of you have done a road trip to get equipment?
> > - travelled 50 miles?
> > - travelled 100 miles?
> > - travelled 250 miles?
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Congrats on getting a nice LA36 operational.
I did a quick check on http://bama.sbc.edu/index.html
but Scopex is not even listed!
I give the url, because perhaps Scopex is also sold under another
name? Never heard of Scopex, but very likely there are quite a
few other brands that I never heard of ...
- Henk.
> Now, next question. Anyone got a service manual for a Scopex 4D25?
>
> Gordon.
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Hi there,
I've finally got the ribbons for my LA36, unjammed the pins in the
printhead and it is printing. It's not quite right yet, though...
The printhead often jitters backwards and forwards, sometimes several
inches. When you hit "RETURN" it's obviously lost track of where the
head is, and slams it into the left-hand stop, where it sits obstinately
pressed against the spring.
Cleaning up the photosensor bit on the interrupter wheel seemed to help
a little.
Gordon.
No problem. There are two ways to do this. Replace the kybd with the one
piece kybd which has the numeric keypad attached. Or, pop out the plastic filler
panel, And install the numeric keypad, which has a small cable that goes to the
main kybd. Either way, you must remove the white cover, flip over the
keyboard assy, and unscrew the kybd. The entire procedure should take less than 15
minutes. I have both in the keyboard and the keypad in stock.
Thanks, Paul
Message: 29
Date: Sun, 29 Jan 2006 14:55:50 -0800 (PST)
From: Fred Cisin <cisin at xenosoft.com>
Subject: Re: you never know what you can find if you just ask
<snip>
>There was a nice "portable" screen made of red and green LEDs.
>Now that blue has come down to a reacheable price, that could be
>done as a really nice one.
-------------
Tell me more! I've got a display unit here that's made of alternating columns
of red & green LEDs and I've long wondered why they're not all red as they
usually are. Do you strobe both columns with the same data but different
duty cycles, or what?
mike
On Jan 28 2006, 15:31, Richard wrote:
> How many of you have done a road trip to get equipment?
> - travelled 50 miles?
Several times. My ASR33 came from about that far away.
> - travelled 100 miles?
> - travelled 250 miles?
also quite a few times. My Exidy Sorcerer, a Cromemco, a Superbrain,
and a couple of complete PDP-11s have all been that far in the back of
my car.
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
On Jan 28 2006, 12:42, Tony Duell wrote:
> Ayone else remember the 'Optic RaM', a poor-man's image sensor.
>
> >From what I remember they were a normal DRAM chip with a quartz lid
to
> the package
Yes, I remember them. Steve Ciarcia wrote a Circuit Cellar article
about them.
> (it's been suggested you could take a cerdip 4116 or 4164,
> knock off the top and replkce it with a window).
And indeed you could, though not all DRAMs were addressed in such
straightforward linear fashion as the "proper" one. I had (still have,
I think) some Fujitsu 4116s you can do it with.
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York