Dallas Hemphill has:
2 HP-9816 systems
2 HP-9121 disk drives
2 keyboards
2 6-pen plotters
1 2225A printer
cables, operating system, software, and lots of manuals, from about 1983.
contact Dallas if interested:
dallashemphill at hotmail.com
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I apologize if you received more than one email - Yahoo "Classic" does this.
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While reorganizing my parts cabinet, I came across three unused
AMD '186 CPUs from the early 1980's, still in original antistatic
plastic box. One 80L186-16, one 80C186-25, and the small one is
also an 80C186-25.
http://s1181.photobucket.com/albums/x426/DrCharlesMorris/?action=view&curre…
$10 shipped in US; $10 plus actual postage internationally.
thanks
Charles
Following up on this thread from last July:
I found the 1989 mc magazine article on the 68K ISA coprocessor board. I
have the article and have gone through it. Instead of an PC/XT ISA
coprocessor, I've decided to pursue an S-100 68K CPU board based on the one
in the "68000 Microcomputer Systems: Designing and Troubleshooting".
Thanks!
Andrew Lynch
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Andrew Lynch [mailto:lynchaj at yahoo.com]
> Sent: Saturday, July 10, 2010 5:49 PM
> To: 'cctalk at classiccmp.org'
> Subject: 68K ISA project
>
> Hi! Just out of curiosity does anyone know of any home brew ISA bus 68K
> boards?
>
> I've seen numerous home brew 68K projects of varying styles but none meant
> to plug into the PC/AT ISA bus. I tried Google but nothing obvious turned
> up. Ideas/URLs appreciated.
>
> Thanks and have a nice day!
>
> Andrew Lynch
>
> PS, something like this but with more detail
>
> http://john.ccac.rwth-aachen.de:8000/as/pcpar.html
While refreshing my memory of the bits and pieces of sundry I picked up
with an IBM System/34 several years ago I rediscovered a pair of boards
in-box that are marked AT&T MERLIN. They appear completely unused,
bubble-wrapped in apparent original packaging.
I don't know anything about the system, so if you want me to be able to
identify _which_ boards they are, you'll need to give me some hints :)
Shipping costs only, from 50441.
- JP
All,
I'm trying to scan some documentation on "IBM PC" sized 3-hole paper. For
some reason the scanner is prone to pulling multiple sheets through when
doing the reverse sides. Doesn't seem to have this issue when doing the
facing side. I haven't seen this with US letter size paper, either.
Wondering if anyone has any tips for avoiding this?
The scanner is a Umax Astra 2400S w/ Umax sheet feeder.
Steve
--
> Date: Tue, 21 Sep 2010 11:15:35 -0700 (PDT)
> From: Fred Cisin <cisin at xenosoft.com>
> Somehow, the absolute basics of even working with threaded fasteners have
> fallen from the educational system, and people are re-inventing basic
> normal techniques.
>
>
> When is the demo on how to suck eggs?
My experience is that most folks don't know what one means when one uses
an expression about sucking eggs. I thought everyone knew the, "Don't
teach your grandmother..." expression, but apparently familiarity with it
is kind of rare. At least around here.
Jeff Walther
Ok, as NICE as a pair of 3278 or 3279's would look in my herc setup - those aren't likely to be reasonably found. So I was looking for one or two 3179 terms to act as CMS or TSO user terminals. Anyone have some in working condition that they'd like to trade off?
J
http://library.rider.edu/special_collections/typewriters/ibm1.jpg
I am currently minding one of these on its journey to a local museum,
but it is missing the enter/return key cap [*], if anyone has a spare
please I would be willing to pay postage.
The console I have was once used with the local Elliott Brothers
Elliott 503 computer.
thanks.
[*] large square key cap seen at the right hand side of the keyboard.
>
> I think the problem is that many modern motherboards don't have the pins
> of the second drive select and MotorOn signal wired up. Whether the
> signals exist on accessible pins of an I/O chip I don't know (if they do,
> it may be possible to add jumper wires, but some people are afraid of
> soldering to motherboards).
>
Quite likely they don't. The first time I ran into a motherboard like this,
I was fortunate enough that the manufacturer provided a schematic online. I
looked at it and at the data sheet for the SuperIO chip that the motherboard
uses, and I found out that that SuperIO chip does not have enough pins to
run two floppy drives and also drive all the fans and other stuff on that
motherboard. IIRC, the SuperIO is configurable and does have the option of
bringing the signals for the second floppy drive out to pins, but if you did
that, some other functions that the motherboard needs more could not be
brought out to pins.
--Tim