Hello,
I have this DEC M8017-AA / DLV11 module that I am trying to configure to
act as a console. I have been trying to find a manual to tell me what
jumpers go where, but the only manuals or resources I can seem to scrounge
up are for the DLV11-E, DLV11-F, and DLV11-J.
If anybody knows what the jumper settings are, or where I can find them, I
would really appreciate it. Here is a image of the board I am trying to
configure: https://ibb.co/MS3hphz
Thank You, Gavin
> From: Zane Healy
> How safe is it to put modern rack rails (HP) in a classic DEC Rack?
May I ask why you're doing that? Are you trying to mount modern units
in an old rack?
If you're trying to mount old units (RK05's, BA11's, etc) in an old rack,
I've been working on finding old slide-mounts; e.g. I know the thing
to order for RK05's.
Noel
THAT IS? NEAT? AL NEVER? SAW THIS? BEFORE....THERE? WAS ALSO A? ?CHASSIS? THAT? DEC MADE? SORT? OF A LAB? COMPUTER TYPE OF THING THAT HAD? A? SWITCH AND LIGHT? FRONT PANEL AT ONE? TIME? FOR Q BUS???
I SEEM TO REMEMBER A? BROCHURE? ?ON IT ... AND IT IS? HERE.... SOMEWHERE.
ED#
In a message dated 4/29/2019 6:27:23 PM US Mountain Standard Time, aek at bitsavers.orgwrites:
I thought about it.. but..https://www.ebay.com/itm/133019966845
> It occurs to me that the turbochannel slots have 4A each. It would be
> entirely possible to print a whole open source board like the raspberry
> Pi (or banana Pi, etc) on a turbochannel card and kill two birds with
> one stone.
I'n not quite sure why people are so interested in killing birds with
stones, but perhaps that's a discussion for another time :)
I've thought about doing something similar. I use my Raspberry Pis / small
computers to do more than just MOP boot, serve NFS, and perhaps NAT or
route to the Internet:
https://hackaday.io/project/218-speed-up-pkgsrc-on-retrocomputers
(it does need to be updated a little)
It's not entirely clear whether you're talking about making a board that a
Pi (whether Raspberry, Banana, or other compatible) can just plug in, or
if you're talking about making a full TURBOchannel board that has a Pi on
the board itself ("print a whole open source board"). If the full board,
then it would make a lot more sense if it was interfaced directly to
TURBOchannel and could present itself as various devices such as mass
storage, ethernet and GPIO. Otherwise, why bother with the complexity?
My VAXstation 4000/90 has a TURBOchannel adapter. It was not easy to find,
nor was it cheap. I'm currently using it for a TC-USB card:
https://web.archive.org/web/20170831062121/http://www.flxd.de/tc-usb/
So a Pi on a TURBOchannel card wouldn't be useful for any of my other
VAXstation 4000/60 machines (nor VLC).
Otherwise, it would make a lot more sense to instead mount a Pi in a 3.5"
drive's space and use a Molex drive power connector to power it. One can
even get fancy and get a 12 volt to 5 volt regulator to power the Pi.
I looked in to the idea of using an ESP8266 in place of the AUI to give
older machines wireless, but it seems this is hardly trivial:
https://hackaday.com/2015/06/12/retro-edition-the-lan-before-time/
That also dissuaded me from imagining something that could plug in to the
AUI port and interface with a Pi or other SBC. The same goes for a modern,
inexpenive, small way to interface an SBC with the 10BASE2 ports on older
machines.
So I can't picture any better way to get ethernet from the back of the
machine to a Pi / SBC, internal or otherwise, without an AUI and ethernet
cable. How were you thinking of doing that?
John