IBM has had a number of "industrial computer" models.
The IBM Server 7587 is a hardware platform designed for reliable 24 hour operation. It was often used in mid-1990s computer telephony interfaces (Pentium socket 7, up to 233 MHz).
Responding to the customer's need for a powerful, reliable ISA bus computer that is easy to panel/wall mount and easy to service, IBM developed the IBM 7587.
It is a 5 slot ISA/PCI passive backplane, PICMG compliant computer powered by an IBM Single Board Computer. The 7587 has a large filtered cooling fan that keeps the internal components well under their operating limits, even in hot environments. With its shock mounted hard disk drive and adapter hold down bracket, the system can withstand the shock and vibration found in many harsh work environments.
Programming interfaces are supported for watchdog timer and thermal monitoring functions on the SBC. The system can operate without disk, display or keyboard. It is quick to service, with all internal components easily accessible after removing the top cover.
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Did you ask on vcfed forums? I do recall a few years ago one or two folks offering to make sets although being years ago you may have been one of them :-)
-------- Original message --------From: william degnan <billdegnan at gmail.com> Date: 12/11/16 4:17 PM (GMT-06:00) To: cctech <cctech at classiccmp.org> Subject: looking for keytronics keyboard pad replacement kit
There was a seller on ebay who had a set of the pre-made keyboard key pads
for sale...anyone here selling these?? Yes I could make my own, I have gone
through the process, but I'd like to buy a set or two as I have a few
keyboards to repair.? it's a time consuming process.
Thanks in advance.
Bill
Picked this up a while back, just getting around to messing with it.
Appears to be an IBM XT compatible machine in a portable....err luggable
size. Dual 360K drives, although the second one does not seem to be
working. I can get it to boot to dos, but run out of space quite quickly.
Anyone have any experience with these machines, is it possible to
upgrade the drives in there? There appear to be isa card slots inside, i
was thinking as a last resort to swap out the floppy controller and put
some new drives in it. That space limitation is really making it a
doorstop. I have a parallel port hard drive, but the driver takes up too
much space and will not fit on the boot disk.
--Devin
https://s20.postimg.org/t0ozx0iul/IMG_0018.jpghttps://s20.postimg.org/cqytu486l/IMG_0022.jpg
I have contact with a motivated seller who has a huge bunch of IBM
Industrial systems to sell. They are Model 7587, and were used on the
Kansas Turnpike to run printers and the like (maybe other stuff).
he has about 50 of the things and has them listed for $15 bucks, but is
motivated to sell any / all.
If anyone wants a nice AT system with 4 slots and power supply this would
be one to get. It has a single board computer type system card in it, so I
suspect the backplane is passive. I have a friend working on the full
documentation, as he did sell them a long time ago. He said they were made
for IBM by a company which also sold a lot of the stuff, Par (sp?)
Contact me and I'll put you in direct contact with Ron. He is moving and
has to get rid of them or trash them. I don't have room for them all or
I'd store them and parcel them out of my warehouse.
Ebay listing below has the information about them, but we can get them
direct. If anyone has any ideas on the shipping charges, Ebay is screwing
him horribly and help would be appreciated to get them shipped at a better
rate.
Thanks
Jim
http://www.ebay.com/itm/262750011708
Hi,
I'm looking after some documentation on the BASF 6104 8" floppy drive. I
really want to know how to align it properly.
I do not have a 8" alignment disc, can it be done without one?
/Anders
Hi, I'm new to this list, but I've been on the rescue and geeks list
for many years.
I'm kind of a Unix guy, but unlike many of you, I learned mostly on
AT&T Unix. I started using Unix in the early '80s and ran a public
access Unix system from roughly '87 to '92, when it turned into a real
ISP, which got to be quite large. We mostly used Dec Alpha stuff then.
I couldn't afford a Sun workstation in the '80s, so ran SVR2/3/4 on
Intel hardware, and even that was expensive. These were the days of
1200bps Smartmodems (which were also pricey) and terminal or BBS
interfaces. The Unix systems provided Usenet, real email and even
rudimentary file transfer via UUCP.
I still love the terminal based interface and won't run X on my old
hardware. I'm really a Unix Philosophy sort of guy. Small tools,
filters, and all the rest.
So, on to my question: I run UnixWare 2.02 on a couple of older
machines here at home. It is a pretty standard version of SVR4 if you
don't install the Netware stuff. It is very stable and runs great on
the older Pentium hardware I have. Recently I build a dual processor
P3 system with an ASUS P2B-D MB so I could run SVR4-MP, which runs
wonderfully. These are SCSI systems with SCSI2SD boards used as disk
drives. Old 50 pin SCSI drives are getting more expensive and have
questionable longevity.
I want to build some emergency rescue diskettes and tapes, and my
problem is that the 3.5" floppy will not format a diskette under
UnixWare. I've tried everything I can think of. The drive is good (I
can format a DOS floppy when I boot up DOS), and the diskettes are
known good.
When I use the format command on the raw disk device, I get the following:
# /usr/sbin/format -V /dev/rdsk/f03dt
formatting.
UX:format: ERROR: Formatted 0 out of 160 tracks:
Failed in write/read/compare verification on track 0.
Doing so without the -V verification just appears to merrily format
the diskette, but it's not formatted.
The device(s) I'm using are:
crw-rw-rw- 5 root sys 1,112 Feb 14 1995 /dev/rdsk/f03ht
or
crw-rw-rw- 5 root sys 1,112 Feb 14 1995 /dev/rdsk/f03h
Both yield the same error.
I'm thinking this must be a device driver problem, but i"m out of my
league here.
Anybody have an idea what's going on and how to fix it?
Oh, and sorry for the long post. I thought it might be polite to
introduce myself.
TIA,
Tom
The rubber feet on my VT100 keyboards are falling off. The feet are in good
condition, just the glue seems to be failing. Does anyone know what kind of
glue should be used to stick them back on reliably?
Thanks
Rob
The following is for sale, or trade possibly.
Most of the listed items I've used together with SGI IRIX and
HP/Compaq/DEC OpenVMS and Digital/Tru64 UNIX systems and served me very
well.
I need to sell this by the end of the month (Nov-2016), else I'll have
to potentially scrap a considerable bunch of it.
I probably forgot to mention a number of things and perhaps I made a few
mistakes here and there. I'll try to update (and if needed, correct)
this list with follow-up posts. For now, this is the list of items:
- SGI systems, e.g. MIPS R5000 and R5200 processor equipped O2s
notably, perhaps also a teal Indigo? with 250-MHz R4400, at least 256
Mbytes (also up to 1 Gbyte available) of RAM, various types of CPUs
available, along with various other options in terms of disks, video
I/O, etc. (ask me) --> suggestion: if you don't care for IRIX, an O2
would still make an excellent X terminal to any e.g. other system, too,
as they don't consume a lot of power and they're wonderfully small;
- SGI parts, like an SGI Tezro dual-processor 700-MHz R16000
system board and an SGI DMediaPro DM10 IEEE-1394a FireWire PCI card plus
cable and manual;
- DEC Multia/UDB VX40B, maximized, with 166-MHz LCA4/21066
processor, the maximum amount of RAM (256 Mbytes), large 73.4-Gbyte 2?"
SCSI HDD (with Tru64 UNIX V5.1B[-5?] optionally pre-installed, OpenVMS
V7.2 also works on it, the original vertical stand and documents are
present, too), Ensoniq AudioPCI (16-bit 48-KHz) audio card, replacement
NVRAM/TOY back-up battery, experimental SRM console, PCI audio card and
custom-shoehorned, etc.;
- various older/non-x86 or compatible computer (besides earlier
mentioned SGI, e.g. DEC, Compaq and HP) bits & parts, think of FireWire
(e.g. IEEE-1394a), audio, etc. cards, cables and such ... included are
things like an AlphaServer DS15-compatible PCI audio card, HP IEEE-1394a
FireWire PCI card (rare, should work in some HP Integrity systems) and
more (ask me for details);
- Exar/Neterion/S2io 10-Gbit fiber-optical (10GBASE-SR) PCI-X
Ethernet NICs including transceivers, besides x86/-64 also OpenVMS and
IRIX compatible (and tried/used in various systems, including HP
rx2600s, rx2620s and a DS15 and also an SGI Tezro), LC FC cables
optionally available, too;
- Mellanox 40-Gbit InfiniBand PCI-E adapters (3 total), optional
copper and fiber-optical cables, in various lengths, are also available;
- various (e.g. HP) HBAs, notably SCSI (e.g. Ultra160 and
Ultra320) and FC (e.g. 2-Gbit and 4-Gbit), for PCI/-X or PCI-E, many
PCI/-X cards also compatible with IRIX and even OpenVMS, some include
the HP-branded "combo" types, providing both dual-channel FC (HBA) and
Ethernet (NIC);
- various optical/tape drives and media (e.g. DVD-RAM, various
data & cleaning tapes, of which many brand new), DDS/DAT of many types
(e.g. DDS-2/DAT12, DDS-3/DAT24, DDS-4/DAT40 and DDS-5/DAT72) Ultrium
(mostly LTO-1 and LTO-3), mostly of brands like HP (notably), Quantum
and Sony... to summarize several:
-- HP Ultrium LTO-3 SCSI half-height tape drives
-- Quantum Ultrium LTO-1 SCSI full-height tape drive
-- various Ultrium LTO-3, -2 and -1 cleaning and data cartridge
tapes (mostly HP-branded)
-- various (HP and Sony-branded) DDS-4/DAT40 tape drives, also
one DDS-5/DAT72 drive, all with
-- various DDS-5/DAT72, DDS-4/DAT40, DDS-3/DAT24, DDS-2/DAT12
and DDS-1/DAT8 tapes;
- various DVD-RAM discs, both with and without the plastic caddies;
- various HP, AXUS and Ciprico brand Ultra320 SCSI/S-ATA-bridged
& 2-Gbit or 4-Gbit FC external enclosures, for HDDs (optionally
including large capacity HDDs, also hardware RAID functionality
depending per enclosure), 5?" devices and more (these can be tricky to
ship, but not impossible), to summarize some of it:
-- AXUS Demon SA-16U4P Ultra320 SCSI<=>S-ATA RAID storage
enclosure, including 16 * 1-Tbyte S-ATA HDDs and spares --> advantages:
relative low power consumption and triple-redundant power
-- Ciprico/Huge Systems MediaVault 4-Gbit FC/FC-AL RAID disk
array, including transceivers, 10 * 250-Gbyte P-ATA HDDs plus one or
more spare HDDs --> advantages: low power consumption and rather silent
-- HP StorageWorks M5313A FC/FC-AL 2-Gbit (JBOD) disk array,
including transceivers and 14 * 146.8-Gbyte FC HDDs and one or two spare
HDDs, too --> note: perhaps not useful for OpenVMS users as-is, as
JBOD and FC-AL are a no-go, but it can be used in a larger SAN setup;
- various types of printed documents/documentation (various
manuals and reference guides, from e.g. SGI and Intel);
- APC Smart-UPS 3000 XLM (heavy-duty, 3000VA capacity) UPS
back-up battery aggregate power system, plus special APC RJ-45 USB cable
(the whole unit is perhaps hard to ship, but not impossible I guess),
this UPS can sustain e.g. several 2U and even some 4U HP Integrity
servers for up to 30~40 minutes (depending on the loads, of course);
- HP OpenVMS Alpha V8.4 SPL (Software Product Library) July
2010, including the original box and 'documents';
- lots of relatively recent 300-Gbyte and 146.8-Gbyte 80-pin
(SCA/-2) and 68-pin 10K and some 15K RPM, hot-swap, SCSI HDDs (most are
HP-branded);
- older <=9-Gbyte SCSI disks, from various vendors, some with
(e.g. DEC) firmware, with 50-, 68- and 80-pin (SCA/-2) connectors (many
DEC and Compaq/HP-branded ones, relevant for OpenVMS and Digital/Tru64
UNIX, too);
- HP StorageWorks 3U external 5?" SCSI expansion enclosure, room
for 4 (68-pin) SCSI devices (including optical drives, tape drives and
including full-height models);
- PCMCIA and PC card items: SanDisk CompactFlash card reader,
SIIG IEEE-1394a adapter, USB 2.0 adapter and an Adaptec Fast SCSI
adapter plus cable;
- Apple ADB and serial items: Griffin iMate adapters (2 total, 1
in original packaging) and Keyspan adapter;
- Chieftec SNT-3141 S-ATA HDD backplane plus sleds and I can
provide 3 * free 250-Gbyte S-ATA HDDs --> suggestion: perhaps useful
for in a system like the HP zx2000 (if it fits, of course; I never tried
it);
- IBM System x central fan tray (P/N: 90P4618, FRU P/N: 26K4761)
and also (e.g.) x346 rack rails (might fit on other devices/systems,
too), SCSI HDD caddies, fans and more (ask me);
- HP KVMIP console (PN 262589-821) 8-port extender hub, no power
supply required for this;
- Gefen 1080p HDMI scaler, professional grade (original box
present), useful for some computers and monitors to correct aspect ratios;
- non-computer items, or indirectly: professional SDI equipment,
like JVC-branded CRT and LCD monitors, Miranda bridges (including for
IEEE-1394a FireWire to SDI) and more, also many cables of various
lengths available and also photo & video equipment (e.g. Nikon D70 plus
Nikon Nikkor AF-S 18-70mm f/1:3.5-4.5G zoom lens, a barely used Sony
HDR-FX1000/E plus accessories and various bits & parts and a Tamron TV
Zoom Lens 12.5-75mm f/1.8 with C mount with constant aperture over the
zoom range).
All the items are located in the Netherlands. I'll provide more
information and pictures on demand.
As far as possible trades go. I'm mostly interested in lenses (mostly
in Nikon F/G, Pentax K, Leica M, Leica M39, M42 and Sony E-Mount
mounts), in particular fast longer telephoto lenses (135mm and above),
also enlarger lenses.
- MG
Okay, after a ton of rounding up the parts I finally have the keyboard,
keyboard cable, mouse, Indigo and 13W3 to VGA cable to try to bring my
Indigo back up.
I put my baby on the desk, cable it all up... and burning smell when I
start it up.
So far I can't find anything on the PCBs that looks burned. Everything
smells somewhere between old and burned, so that isn't much help.
But here is where it gets crazier.
I originally had a R3000 Indigo, with Entry graphics as I recall. Or maybe
it had some 3d ass, but it was still 8bit color depth. At some point in
the NASA Auctions I had come across another Indigo that worked, and it had
a R4K cpu board. And then I had a card that went into one of the desksides
that had a Elan set that got you Elan on a deskside (I think.)
I left one of the Indigos outside with a bunch of computers for
craigslisters to come curbcycle, but a homeless guy stole it all took all
the metal and left behind all the smashed up plastic parts (yay.) I
couldn't remember what was in the Indigo I left outside.
After sniffing the PCBs for a minute or so like bomb dog looking for a
burned resistor or cap.... I got to thinking that the PCBs are bigger than
I remembered. Better than I remembered.
I google the part numbers, and low and behold it's a R4K CPU card and a
Elan graphics set. Good for performance, but it's not 100% my first SGI.
But still.
BUTTTTTTTT.... there is a different power supply for R4K machines, that is
different from R3K machines. I'm pretty sure the machine I have is my old
trusty Eggbert, and it has a R3K PSU.
So now I need to find (this should be easy?) a R4K power supply for an
Indigo. I don't even know if the boards will work, green LED came on for a
bit then went orange. There was frame buffer output. There was no startup
sound that I knew and loved.
The 9430810 is the R3000 power supply, the 9430812 is the R4000/R4400 PSU.
Any leads?
--
Ethan O'Toole
Excellent news! I eagerly look forward to this so I can get my 9825T talking to my 9895A! If you spin a PC board, I will be willing to purchase one or two if you end up with extras or are willing to coordinate an order.