Does anyone have close up pictures of the MIT CADR? Boards, the
maintaince indicator display, anything interesting and close up. LM-2
and and Lambda would also be of curiosity.
On 16 January 2017 at 00:51, Jon Elson <elson at pico-systems.com> wrote:
> Also, flux smoke gets all over the lenses. That is one downside on my
> Olympus, the bottom is not sealed. I made up some card stock and glued it
> in place to try to prevent the smoke getting inside. But, it still gets on
> the lenses requiring periodic cleaning.
I use a fan and a flexible tube (for easy positioning) to suck the
smoke away. It removes most of the smoke (from my nose as well).
OK! here goes...well the B and L stereo zoom has a screw in place over
the optics underneath... it is for attaching close up lenses or
reduction in power lenses etc. you can also screw in a clear cover.
the cover will also screw in our the aux lens if my brain remembers
right.
Many other stereo microscopes also have this provision to add a clear
filter or aux booster or de-creaser in power lens. always best to keep
active optics covered with some protection to save from solder splash,
sharp things sticking up from scratching etc etc...
Ed# _www.smecc.org_ (http://www.smecc.org)
In a message dated 1/14/2017 10:52:08 A.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
cclist at sydex.com writes:
On 01/14/2017 09:36 AM, COURYHOUSE at aol.com wrote:
> Be sure your stereo-zoom has a cover thing screwed into the
> front of it. always good to protect the active optics.
>
> We have a rework station with a sliding X Y table on it.... and a
> scope mounted on it... but... my hands are not steady as when
> young..( need to find technology to assist with that!)
Ditto on the second paragraph.
But I'm not sure what you mean by a "cover thing". Care to elaborate?
Thanks,
Chuck
We are still fiddling with the TU56 drive on the PDP-12 at the RICM. We
followed the head skew procedure, but it calls for a G500 module to amplify
the signals from the tape head. We cobbled together a pair if G888 modules
as the amplifier, and it worked OK. The G500 schematics are in the skew
procedure so we could make one, but we don't know anything about the
physical layout. Has anyone ever seen a DEC G500 module?
--
Michael Thompson
The cable that came with my 11/34 is for current loop, i need a cable
that is wired for serial. If no one has the cable, i could make one
myself, i just need the 40 pin connector that goes on the cable. I have
been unable to find the connector. Oddly ebay appears to have the side
of the connector that goes on the M7856 board itself, but i need the
other end, that goes on the wire.
Any help is much appreciated. Lots of setbacks with this thing. I just
want to see it running already.
--Devin
> From: Eric Smith
> I have a computer of the type that Gates and Allen used for that early
> development. :-)
> I don't have it running, though.
Really? Which model processor; KA, KI, KL?
Noel
PS: Apparently Gates and Allen at one point rented time on a commercial
service in Boston to do development; anyone know who that was, and what
machine/OS is was?
-------- Original message --------
From: jos <jos.dreesen at greenmail.ch>
Date: 2017-01-15 12:33 AM (GMT-08:00)
To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts" <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Subject: Re: Kenbaks in Nova Scotia
>?? And how a tiny museum in a tiny province could afford them.? Kind of a head scratcher!
They were not always 30K+...
I visited the museum &? talked to the (very friendly ) owner.
? While this museum in itself may not warrant a trip to Nova Scotia, the area is >well worth a visit.
>Jos
Cool. ?Unfortunately I'm way over on the other side of the country so it's unlikely I'll get there. ?I just wonder why the previous owner, who seems concerned with getting the Kenbak's story out to the world, elected to send so many to one rather isolated place. ?Interesting.