will add it to my list as I go though arrivals here Carl. thx---
Ed# _www.smecc.org_ (http://www.smecc.org)
In a message dated 10/13/2015 2:42:55 P.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
Carl.Claunch at gartner.com writes:
I have a Perkin Elmer VT2222 disk drive (Vanguard I) which due to the
acquisitions of the time, was Interdata and became Wangco and Cipher. Looking
for a manual especially schematics.
I have an IBM 9347 (9 track tape drive) which uses IPI-3 for its
interface. If I can get schematics for the drive (or for the controller board that
goes in a 9370 system, I can get work up a replacement interface. Looking
for the manuals for drive or controller.
Thanks,
Carl
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Yep, I was the one that scored that SYM-1 and accessories for $40 :)
Pictures at https://www.flickr.com/photos/131070638 at N02
Just arrived, have yet to power it up as I'm busy with DG projects (next
email!) :)
J
> From: Henk Gooijen
> yes, please take a nice picture of it! ... The higher the resolution
> the better!
OK, I scanned it (I prefer scanning to pictures, as there is almost
inevitably distortion when using a lens), at 300 dpi. The whole thing
wouldn't fit in my A3 scanner, but I got the majority of it, and the part
that's not shown is just the plain two-colour band.
Available here:
http://ana-3.lcs.mit.edu/~jnc/tech/jpg/CanadaPanel.jpg
and I've also added it to my 'PDP-11 resources page', here:
http://ana-3.lcs.mit.edu/~jnc/tech/pdp11/PDP-11_Stuff.html
Also, I have recently scanned in the front indictor panel for the 11/55 and
11/70 (the later one, with the blue/blue colour scheme), and those can be
found on that page too, along with drawings of the basic 40-45-70 panel (only
the on/off switch, etc, locations differ) and the basic 45-50-55 panel (with
on/off switch and selector switch holes added); those have also been added to
that page.
I'd like to encourage people with other front panels (I myself am
particularly interested in those for the 11/45, RF11, RK11-C and RP11-C) to
scan them too, for people who are interested in doing reproductions. I can
host the images, for people who don't have that capability.
Noel
I have a Perkin Elmer VT2222 disk drive (Vanguard I) which due to the acquisitions of the time, was Interdata and became Wangco and Cipher. Looking for a manual especially schematics.
I have an IBM 9347 (9 track tape drive) which uses IPI-3 for its interface. If I can get schematics for the drive (or for the controller board that goes in a 9370 system, I can get work up a replacement interface. Looking for the manuals for drive or controller.
Thanks,
Carl
________________________________
This e-mail message, including any attachments, is for the sole use of the person to whom it has been sent, and may contain information that is confidential or legally protected. If you are not the intended recipient or have received this message in error, you are not authorized to copy, distribute, or otherwise use this message or its attachments. Please notify the sender immediately by return e-mail and permanently delete this message and any attachments. Gartner makes no warranty that this e-mail is error or virus free.
Hey there,
I'm currently working on a replica of Don Lancaster's prototype TV
Typewriter (pic here:
http://s1381.photobucket.com/user/unclefalter/media/20151011_125748_zpssu7yy
ujf.jpg.html?o=0 ) and I was wondering - does anyone know where the unit
that appeared on the cover (with the more refined keyboard) ended up? I've
asked around, including Don and nobody seems to know where it got to.
I'm also wondering if anyone knows a source that might have the keytops that
unit used or something close (I understand they were made by Mechanical
Enterprises). I've enough parts here to build two or three TVTs and I
thought after I get the prototype replica done I might go for the cover
unit, esp. if it no longer exists anymore. But I understand those keytops
were kind of a one off deal for that article.
Thanks!!
Brad
We did a lot more debugging on the TC12 LINCtape controller.
We saw a 500ns glitch in the LMU MOTION signal that corresponded to a short
slowdown in tape speed. We will investigate this next week.
We entered the LINC instruction to check a single block (0707) in the left
switches and a block number (0777-0000) in the right switches. When we
pressed the DO key it should go to that block on the LINCtape. With large
block numbers (07xx) and with the tape positioned half way through the tape
it worked OK. With lower block numbers it sometimes could not find the
block and searched back-and-forth on the tape. The logic analyzer showed
that the block numbers were correct in a sequence of several blocks, and
then it will read a bad block number. The TC12 would tell the TU55 to turn
around, it would read a good block number, realize that it was going the
wrong direction, and turn the tape around. It would then read a good block
number, and then a bad block number, and turn around.
At this point we don't think that we are working with bad tapes, but the
problem might be in either the TU56 tape drive, or the TC12 LINCtape
controller. We see bad behavior in both devices so we will do as Charles
Lasner suggested and swap a TU55 and TU56 between the PDP-12 and the
PDP-8/I. This will let us test the TU56 with a known good TC01 LINCtape
controller, and test a known good TU55 with a questionable TC12 LINCtape
controller.
We ran the A-to-D converter test and were rewarded with a display on the
VR14 that showed correct operation of the knobs and A-to-D converters.
--
Michael Thompson
> >
> >> On Oct 13, 2015, at 11:52 AM, tony duell <ard at p850ug1.demon.co.uk>
> wrote:
> >>
> >>> The only other terminal I worked
> >>> with that could do that was a Tektronix storage scope terminal
(4010
> >>> or 4014, IIRC). The Tek printer wasn't built-in, but it did take
a
> >>> scan of the live screen, so that was similar. The paper was
> >>> silver-grey and I remember it coming out wet too. Everything else
I
> >>> worked with was either thermal or dot-matrix impact, and could
only
> >>> capture text as it arrived at the terminal, not a screen image.
> >>
AFAIK, the Tektronix external "hard copy units" for their DVST display
terminals (4002A, 4010, 4012, 4014, and others that were integrated into
various systems (e.g., the 4081 computer system, and 4051/4052/4054
desktop computers)) were dry-process devices. The paper was a
dry-silver paper that was photosensitive, but it was developed by heat
rather than by chemicals.
It is possible, in the very early days of the DVST terminals, that some
kind of wet-process hard copy may have been used...or that perhaps a
third party developed a wet-process hard copy unit, but my only
experience was with the thermal-developing dry-silver paper hard copy
units.
I used these devices extensively in my time at Tektronix, and became
quite expert at troubleshooting/adjustment of the hard copy units.
There were no chemicals or toners involved. The paper would come out of
the machine quite warm from the developing process.
The tube in these hard copy devices was indeed weird...wide, but not
very tall. It produced a single scan line that was synchronized with
the motion of the paper through the machine. The scan line was driven
by the terminal, which used a low-intensity scanning beam to "read" the
charge on the storage element of the display screen, and sent the analog
signal from the read-out image to the hard copy unit.
The DVST technology that Tektronix created for these terminals was very
much an example of the extreme levels of CRT technology and knowledge
that existed within Tektronix during those days. Just about every tube
they used for oscilloscopes, scan converters, and all of the DVST tubes
were designed and manufactured in-house at TektroniX HQ in Beaverton,
Oregon. The CRT building was one of the earlier buildings on the
Tektronix campus there. It was quite a place to visit. Even in the
late 1970's, there was amazing CRT development going on there for
building things like the tube for the first 1GHz (analog) oscilloscope.
Rick Bensene
The Old Calculator Museum
http://oldcalculatormuseum.com
I'm in the process of refurbishing an old model SPD Flexowriter (from
the 1950s.) When I
placed it in storage, all worked ok. The storage room was dry (though
not heated or cooled)
and there were no mice or other vermin involved in it's repose. However,
upon starting it
back up (and lubing every moving part beforehand) I discovered the punch
wasn't firing
"on all cylinders."
After disassembling the punch solenoid block, I discovered two of the
coils were now open
(corresponding to the two missing positions) but also, two coils had
apparently shorted
somewhere and changed value. From a nominal 850 ohms, the two were now
about 150 and
500 ohms.
I have a lot of old gear with relays (similar to these driver coils) and
I've *never* had a problem
with an open relay coil (that wasn't caused by obvious damage.) Is this
a problem any of you
have experienced and if so, have you ever discovered the root cause? I
presume it is some
corrosion, but the open coils were open near the middle of the winding
(#41 AWG wire with
about 11000 turns.) The breaks were NOT at the junction of the #41 and
the sturdier wire
that connects to the terminal block.
Also, question 2: the Flexowriter parts list shows two different coils
(both 850 ohms) used in this
assembly. Four of one and four of another. I'm presuming these are
magnetically polarized
so that half are North-up and half are North-down in order to not have
truly strange things
happen all 8 are firing and you get so much magnetism that some
armatures are repulsed
rather than pulled, but I don't find that mentioned in the manual. I'm
planning an experiment
with a hall-effect sensor to verify. So far my failures have all been
one type so I don't have any
to visually examine while I'm unwinding them. The Flexo parts differ
only in their part
number - no other visible differences are seen.
I am rebuilding the coils as I have an ample supply of #41 but I want to
know if I need
this 'normal/reverse' polarity thing if it exists. So far, I've rewound
one coil with a match
in wire direction to the one it replaced and it seems to be ok.
TIA,
Gary
Hi All,
we have a 1039 in our space with the user guide, but without any service
docs. Our specimen does not react to buttons except the reset and test
buttons. the four statusleds light up on a reset and after a second the
center two leds start blinking in sequence. paper and pens are loaded as
per the user guide.
anyone with documentation on this thing?
--
Met vriendelijke Groet,
Simon Claessen
drukknop.nl
> From: Rod Smallwood
> I could use the H960 its attached to!!!
Cold, dead, hands, etc, etc! :-)
But to be serious, those things are in really hot demand - I know Paul A
wants some more, I'd like a couple more, etc, etc. They aren't _that_
complicated - it shouldn't be impossible to get more built? Does anyone have
any expertise in this area, to let us know how/where to start?
Noel