be aware there was a DEC terminal plant here in phx az late 70s early
80s
Ed Sharpe archivist for SMECC _www.smecc.org_ (http://www.smecc.org)
In a message dated 5/19/2015 9:53:59 P.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
ddsnyder at zoominternet.net writes:
The serial number can be broken into 3 areas...
The first two digits indicate the country of Manufacture
AY = Ayr, Scotland
BK = Germany
GA = Galway, Ireland
IQ = Somewhere else
NI = Salem, New Hampshire, USA
PC = Irvine, Scotland
KA = Kanata, Ontario, Canada
CX = Colorado Springs, CO, USA
WF = Westfield, MA, USA
AB = Albuquerque, NM, USA
The 3rd Digit indicates the year
7 = 1997 8 = 1998 9 = 1999 etc.
The 4th & 5th digits indicate the week of manufacture from
January.
01 = 1st week in January
12 = 12th week after January 1st (End of March)
20 = Mid April
For a rough calculate take 4 weeks to the month
The remaining digits indicate the run number.
00005 = The 5th one made at this plant
00100 = The 100th one made at this plant
>From the fog in my head...
Dan Snyder, Butler, PA
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jack Rubin" <j at ckrubin.us>
To: <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Sent: Friday, May 01, 2015 5:25 PM
Subject: Place of manufacture for DEC equipment?
Is there a way to identify which DEC plant manufactured a specific piece
of
equipment? I'm certainly aware of the Maynard, Massachusetts label on my
equipment and I'm pretty sure I've seen DEC Kanata, Canada on flipchip
handles. Maybe even PR serial numbers on computers built in Puerto Rico.
Can anyone supply any more extensive and/or detailed information?
Thanks,
Jack
CASTOR:: was the M+ group?s 11/74 housed in it?s own machine room in ZK. Since the machine hardware could be relatively easily reconfigured, POLLUX:: was reserved for when the system was running as 2 independent nodes (3+1 or 2+2 CPUs). The DECnet group had a dual processor system with node name ELROND::.
I used CASTOR:: standalone a couple of times while debugging the MP changes to the DECnet kernel code until ELROND:: became stable. Eventually, ELROND:: became the timesharing system for the DECnet-RSX group.
The lack of cache-coherency and the limited work-arounds (cache-bypass or cache flushing) meant that all the DECnet kernel code, both drivers and protocol stack, ran with cache-bypass enabled on its data PDRs. So the networking code on an MP system had lower peak performance than on a normal 11/70 although you would never notice the difference in regular operation.
John.
Is there a way to identify which DEC plant manufactured a specific piece of equipment? I'm certainly aware of the Maynard, Massachusetts label on my equipment and I'm pretty sure I've seen DEC Kanata, Canada on flipchip handles. Maybe even PR serial numbers on computers built in Puerto Rico.
Can anyone supply any more extensive and/or detailed information?
Thanks,
Jack
http://blog.startupitalia.eu/p101-make-in-italy-de-sandre-olivetti-intervis…
There is a museum in Ivrea with the Programma 101 on display. I think
some of the photos from modern times were from there.
This article is related to a maker fair in Trieste. Please visit the
page for pictures and to give them page clicks, since I am archiving the
info here for the list.
Thanks
Jim
Google translated from article:
The engineer of the legendary P101: "Here are the secrets of the first
Pc of history"
The Mini Maker Faire Trieste meeting with the engineer De Sandre, one of
the creators of the program 101 Olivetti: the first personal computer
will be among the stars of the show to Make In italy Expo (from May 18).
Last October, in the Maker Faire Rome , was presented the exhibition "50
years of Italian innovations: from P101 to the first espresso machine
space". An exhibition, organized by the Foundation Make in Italy , which
now arrives in Milan Expo 2015. From today, in fact, can be seen, in an
expanded version of the original, in two locations in which it was
divided: Telecom Italian pavilion within the exhibition center in Rho
and the National Museum of Science and Technology of the Lombard capital.
The prototype of the P101 ( Program 101 ), recognized as the first
desktop computers in history, made ??his international debut at the
World Exhibition in Paris in 1965. The team, led by Pier Giorgio
Perotto, devised an instrument that had some features that still they
form the basis of any personal computer: CPU with discrete components,
RAM (magnetostrictive delay line), mass storage (magnetic card) and
serial printer to impact.
Within the team of Perotto was a young engineer, Giovanni De Sandre.
Matthew Tro?a met him at the second edition of the Mini Maker Faire
Trieste to talk with him about the success of the P101 (and many other
things).
The interview
How did your story with Olivetti?
I entered into Olivetti April 1, 1960, after the previous talks that had
established my eligibility in that company. I even received the head of
the laboratory at the time, the engineer Mario Tchu , who was the son of
a Chinese ambassador to Vatican. Tchu had specialized in the United
States, and this greatly pleased to Adriano Olivetti , who cast him in
his team. That time I had just graduated, fresh from Politecnico di
Milano, and you think, now my degree is equivalent to a degree in
electrical engineering, but at the time did not exist in this
formulation, so I got a degree in electrical engineering with a
"certificate studies of electronics. "
So she was received by engineer Tchu, who then assumed?
The engineer Tchu was a very friendly, helpful and friendly. He
explained all the activities of the laboratories, mostrandomeli one by
one and explaining with great patience and care that what took place in
those places. In the end I remember that I said, "then engineer, she is
interested in what more? One thing in production or in the project? "And
I said a little 'afraid' to me honestly like to work on projects ...".
Tchu then he asked again, "but she would like to work on the evolution
and improvement of our existing products or instead of entirely new
products?" And then I said that without wishing to presumptuous, I would
have loved work on projects entirely new.
The engineer Tchu picked up the phone, called the engineer Perotto and
said "dear engineer, I have here a person that suits her." That phrase
always decided for my professional future. I went well in the working
group of engineer Perotto, who was my direct responsibility even though
he was only a few years older than me. Perotto was a nice person, of
great culture and technical ability. He had a spontaneous orientation
toward the concrete. I was very lucky because I was thrust into an
almost idyllic. In the Olivetti corporate hierarchy was not seen as an
imposition, not weighed. The leaders were, but they respected because it
was natural respect. People were so influential that respect for them
was spontaneous. I found an atmosphere of great freedom, but also of
great involvement. If I had a problem it was enough to ask for help and
I was listening. My problems and my gaps I filled asking. I learned a
lot while I worked.
What he is initially occupied?
The first thing I worked were checks magnetic, which still bear the
bottom two spaces wider than three a little 'closer. The location of
these areas determines the reading code. The machine that read these
codes had designed Perotto and I was in charge of setting up, checking
its operation, and connecting it to an existing machine Olivetti. Within
six months I had accomplished something.
And then the P101 ...
Work began on the P101 with a deep study of the feasibility of the
product, initially purely theoretical. We wanted to create a car that
was not limited only to make four simple steps that already did with the
mechanical machines. Then produce mechanical machines cost 39,000 lire,
but then were sold to 390 thousand pounds. For Olivetti invest in this
product would not bring the expected revenue. We had to do something to
level a little 'higher. So we started working on the prototype of the P101.
We did not know that the machine had to create, in the sense that there
was still nothing like it on the market. However for me the bonds were
crystal clear: it had to be easy to use, accessible to a
non-professional user. Accessibility was to be the characteristic trait.
In the second place it had to be reduced in size. Finally it would cost
as little as possible. Led by engineer Perotto, then, we started working
on this electronic project. So the first thing to do was to decide the
type of memory to be installed in the machine. Of course we had the
opportunity to go to the store and choose from dozens of memories at our
disposal. In those years there were very few memories. In particular
there was the core memory , but was not good for the small size of our
future machine. The engineer Perotto I knew immediately, I'm a bit
'after. (Laughs) After a study of the type of memory to choose from we
focused on a type of memory of the past generation, which had been
abandoned by now (working memory was a magnetostrictive delay line ).
The technology of the time gave us memories that were not going to
respect the constraints that we had set, so we used the components of
the past, to make the "car of the future".
The revolutionary products as was the P101, they appreciate when they
are ready. Behind their implementation but there is always a big job.
How much have you been working on this project?
We got to work with his head down, day and night, often without
realizing that had arrived the weekend. In some periods there was no
agreement on Sunday as a day of rest. There were no arrears with whom to
spend the afternoon. All this does not remember it as a burden, but as
the most exciting period of my life. We had to finish first. I think
that needs to come first in some things, that does not mean overdoing
it, but engage and expend maximum to achieve their goals. Running behind
is far worse than through the air.
He never felt the weight of fatigue in what he did?
There was no concept of fatigue for us. It was completely overcome by
the interest that was for what we were doing. We felt a bit 'pioneers in
a world where we often designed parts of electronic circuits, but never
a car full. We proceeded by trial and error, but they hand it proceeded
increased experience.
Chapter Innovation
What about her?
Innovation has to have some unmet need. To return to my story, I believe
that the fact of working at P101, was not immediately something
innovative. For me initially was mainly a strong need. If I think back
to when the University did the calculations with the ruler with which
often was wrong, the idea that you could create a machine that would
help me with extreme speed and precision to make those calculations, for
me was the solution to my real need . Need to be put together with some
technical expertise required to carry out in practice his idea.
Innovation means want to go into the unexplored wilderness, hoping to
find an oasis, a solution but we were not ready, but we have done us.
Italy is a country still able to accept the technology?
When there is something really innovative, I do not know if Italy is the
best country in which to tell this innovation. From this point of view,
perhaps the United States is a country more ready mentally, more
pragmatic and more accustomed to understand the news. But this happens
only in the initial phase. Olivetti also initially was little more than
an island than the rest of the country. A lot of people did not even
know that there was this company.
But I believe that the issue on which we must reason is as follows.
Today the world has certainly changed and we are used to accept anything
new very easily. The challenge is to understand what, in this chaos of
new, really creates innovation, understood as making something useful
for our lives. What really affects our lives? That is, if what we invent
or we make an impact in a way that is not obvious, trivial, obvious,
then maybe other countries are more receptive, but Italy certainly not
least, because of quality products makes many as he wants. The important
thing, as I said, you know what, among the many new features, it's
really helpful to improve their lives.
He would redo everything you did?
Yes absolutely. Though I speak with hindsight. One can not always
project her life and does not know what may happen in the future.
Certainly more than the experience in Olivetti itself, I would like to
relive the spirit of those years, that basically was a spirit extremely
positive, optimistic, enthusiastic. From my experience I have learned
that critical is the commitment and self-criticism, that a little
'lacking nowadays. Innovation also means being confident, determined and
feed their inner spring. It helps a lot to be introduced in the
technology world, especially now that has become pervasive. Everything
comes from a right balance between a strong driving force and a large
capacity that criticism must regulate itself within us.
What did you learn from your experience?
That we must never stand still. But think of Steve Jobs! What has to do
what he did? It's not that he invented something. What made the
difference, however, was its continuity, his desire to fight, his steely
character, which allowed him to transform a company that was going to
fail in company we know today. What did Jobs? In fact did what many
others did, but of course with an attention to detail and some aspects
that have allowed him to make a difference. Today, companies ride the
wave for a couple of years and when they feel it is necessary to
reinvent itself give up and sit down. Steve Jobs? More than sitting!
That one had the pins under the seat which put him constantly on the
move. He never lies and never gave up, and certainly helped him a lot of
his character. Today we have to stay on the move, never sit down,
because innovation is moving.
16/05/2015
Matthew Tro?a & Alessandro Frau
RE: Token Ring
As said below, you can probably not worry too much about the
wiring impedance (etc.) for a small ring.
But you will still need a MAU or something like it.
The token ring adapters have a physical layer protocol for ring
insertion and token monitoring.
The power-up state for a station wire is a physical loopback and it
will try to successfully loop itself before inserting.
A copy of the newsgroup comp.dcom.lans.token-ring FAQ still lives at
http://www.networkuptime.com/faqs/token-ring/index.shtml
Connector pinouts and other info is in there. Stuff on Wikipedia too.
I had to dust off a few neurons to remember this stuff.
Dave.
I'm not reading this list consistently anymore... any direct
questions should be CCed to me.
On 5/18/2015 01:00 PM, cctech-request at classiccmp.org wrote:
>Date: Sun, 17 May 2015 12:58:20 -0400
>From: Sean Caron <scaron at umich.edu>
>To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts"
> <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
>Cc: Sean Caron <scaron at umich.edu>
>Subject: Re: Weird stuff has a TI 810 (also if anyone has token ring
> wiring)
>Message-ID:
> <CAA43vkUJ7US+72OiYhEtrvOgM76u0tUv55wqAP65R21otLkbEg at mail.gmail.com>
>Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
>
>I can tell you from firsthand experience that if you're just doing short
>little runs within a vintage computer room in your home or something like
>that, you can directly pin the 9-pin D-sub over to 8P8C and make short runs
>with common unshielded Cat V cable and it should work fine. I did this all
>the time when I was in high school to connect old MCA PS/2 machines with
>the IBM token ring adapters (9 pin D-sub) to various old 8P8C MAUs that I
>had acquired. I can't speak to dealing with those funky IBM connectors;
>never worked with those.
>
>Best,
>
>Sean
>
>
>On Sun, May 17, 2015 at 12:50 PM, Dave G4UGM <dave.g4ugm at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> >
> >
> > > -----Original Message-----
> > > From: cctalk [mailto:cctalk-bounces at classiccmp.org] On Behalf Of
> > jwsmobile
> > > Sent: 17 May 2015 16:30
> > > To: General at classiccmp.org; Discussion at classiccmp.org:On-Topic and Off-
> > > Topic Posts
> > > Subject: Weird stuff has a TI 810 (also if anyone has token ring wiring)
> > >
> > > There is a white cased TI 810 at Weird Stuff in the AS IS room. Probably
> > > cheap. Of course unknown condition.
> > >
> > > Got some very nice Token ring equipment from an IBM facility of some
> > sort.
> > > will be using for Hercules setups.
> > >
> > > I'll need some balun's for the RJ45 (ibm version) to the DB9 if anyone
> > has an
> > > idea of the hookup. I'd like to figure out if I can wire this w/o using
> > the token
> > > ring cables, since I have what appears to be a bridge unit. I'll have to
> > research
> > > that though.
> > >
> > > Thanks
> > > Jim
> >
> > Jim,
> > Is there a part number on the "bridge" unit? Typically the IBM units just
> > switch the stations it and out of the ring.
> > Dave
> >
> >
---
This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software.
http://www.avast.com
I've finished up things for a new release of Frotz, an extremely portable
Z-machine emulator (plays Infocom games). The Unix port is tested and
ready to go, but I don't have real DOS hardware in working order. Could I
get some people to try it out and let me know how it fares? It's compiled
with Turbo C++ 3.0 for 16-bit DOS. The zipfile is at
http://661.org/if/frotz244.zip. Source is at
https://github.com/DavidGriffith/frotz. Games are available at
http://ifarchive.org/ or https://661.org/if/ (some of my games).
--
David Griffith
dave at 661.org
A: Because it fouls the order in which people normally read text.
Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
A: Top-posting.
Q: What is the most annoying thing in e-mail?
Hello!
The EPROMs are labeled 07595-18045 and 07595-18046. We suspect some
bits have toggled.
Can anyone do a dump for me? It's for the 7596A of our local
hackerspace.
Greets,
Martin
--
Martin Peters
martin.peters at news.uni-stuttgart.de
Johannes Thelen - and others... HP-3000 Series II? series II?? We
would pay handsomely for one.
We found our backup archive set of HP-3000 software - heh heh all
kinds of software including FORUM/3000 which was a multi user 100
seperate boards bulletin board, electronic mail, electronic poll and voting
system, multi user chat rooms...
( this was all pre Internet so it was way cool back then!
just gotta read the tapes.... amazed... this grouping of tapes
was an off site storage I had forgotten about and re found in the
back closet at the house... had not seen it in over 23 years..
I am really hot on getting e series II or II back to have one at
the SMECC museum here in Arizona as it was one of my favorite machines but
also we have the giant plug in front panel for it that shows all
registers that the customer engineer would bring out in a suit case to
really get down and dirty....
We have the series II and III interface board as well as the HP-3000 CX
series interface board which is a separate item.. see
http://www.smecc.org/hp/hewlet16_series_3_with_maint_panel.gif to see it hooked to
HP 3000 WACC-B from U Wisconsin
Used by Marlys Nelson - HP-3000 Programmer Extraordinaire! this photo
was shot after we even had retired the system was using a series 48
with 303 meg drives I kept in next to my desk and would test boards in
it.... When the panel was active on the III with users on it it was
fun to throw it into single step BEWRAHHAHHAHH!!!AA!!!
Ed Sharpe Archvisit for SMECC
In a message dated 5/18/2015 2:30:24 P.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
aek at bitsavers.org writes:
On 5/18/15 1:13 PM, Johannes Thelen wrote:
> the big one of this donate is HP3000 Series III! :D
>
Finding software for the Series II and III has been extremely difficult
so please try to find any that was associated with the machine.
Hello friends!
I just got another donate to my collection... It contains several items, but the big one of this donate is HP3000 Series III! :D
Do anyone know what it weights? This one have CPU with Option 200 rack (my best guess, like some expanded IO?). And is there wheels below racks?
Ps. IBM 1800 project is going further bit by bit, all gate doors and flat cabling is assembled back where they were. More coming about this later!
- Johannes ThelenFinland
Before microcomputers blog (Finnish) http://ennenmikrotietokoneita.blogspot.fi/
I'm looking for a tool to do a bunch of 3.5 floppy imaging using a linux
or a windows box.... Media is all early PC stuff. Any thoughts,
comments, tools of choice?
Is IMD the format of choice for these as well or is there something else
for the newer formats?
Steve
Hi
I'm about to go on a small road trip to pick up some computer gear. I'm
curious about what I'm actually getting :)
http://www.update.uu.se/~pontus/slask/L%C3%B6fberg-haul/
I know what the Siemens and IBM things are, but:
What system would the the Ampex Series 800B have been used with?
The Alfaskop terminals, are they 3270 compatible?
Regarding the huge stack of tapes, what should I look for in order to
identify what might be on them, is the "9270" label any clue?
I will leave the Esselte Scribona FD 20 behind, but I'm curious what it
is? I think it may have served use on an airport, printing boarding
passes or similar.
Regards,
Pontus.
There is a white cased TI 810 at Weird Stuff in the AS IS room. Probably
cheap. Of course unknown condition.
Got some very nice Token ring equipment from an IBM facility of some
sort. will be using for Hercules setups.
I'll need some balun's for the RJ45 (ibm version) to the DB9 if anyone
has an idea of the hookup. I'd like to figure out if I can wire this
w/o using the token ring cables, since I have what appears to be a
bridge unit. I'll have to research that though.
Thanks
Jim
> From: John Wilson
> Even if E11's mP feature is officially unsupported, it was a *crazy*
> amount of work
What made it so much work? (Just curious about the technical aspects...)
Noel
Thanks another million.
- Marc
>> Is the "HP 1000 M/E/F-Series Computers I/O Interfacing Guide"
>> (02109-90006 September 1980) available online somewhere?
>I thought I had sent it to Al some years ago, but it's not listed. In any
>case, I've posted it here:
> http://home.earthlink.net/~jdbryan/dropbox/02109-90006_Sep-1980.7z
> See chapter 5, pages 5-5 and 5-6.
> -- Dave
The only reason I guess is that they're bootable disks. Otherwise a simple filecopy is more than enough :)
-------- Messaggio originale --------
Da: Fred Cisin <cisin at xenosoft.com>
Data:17/05/2015 16:40 (GMT+01:00)
A: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts" <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Oggetto: Re: 3.5 floppy imaging
> If they are just plain old dos format (DD or HD) dd under linux will do
IF they are just plain old DOS format (DD or HD), then COPY will do.
IF they are just plain old DOS format (DD or HD), then there is no reason
to "image"!
IF they are just plain old DOS format (DD or HD), then the files are all
that matters.
IF they are NOT just plain old DOS format (DD or HD), THEN there might be
reason to image, such as if they are some unknown and not understood
format, and the files can not be extracted, or there is reason to believe
that there is some form of information in the structure and format of the
disk that should be preserved, such as system tracks on CP/M disks, etc.
Or, if they are copy-protected, and stuff other than the files needs to be
preserved to be able to use the files.? 'Course then, your "imaging"
methods are not likely to work, anyway.
But, IF they are just plain old DOS format (DD or HD),
then there is NO information other than the file content on the disks.
If you format a 3.5" disk in a DOS/Windoze machine, and copy some file
onto it, . . .
Could you please explain to me WHY you would want an "image" of that disk?
Dan (the donor) brought more manuals, diags on paper tape, and his very
nice color oscilloscope. Dan's 'scope displays RMS, PTP, Average, and other
voltage values on the side of the trace window, so it makes power
measurements very easy.
After reading the manual and getting instructions from Warren, we found
that some of the misbehaving front panel was due to operator (me) error. The
Mode switch to change between LINC and 8 operation only has an effect after
you press the I/O Preset switch, so that is working correctly.
When you press I/O Preset the INST FIELD is set to 1 and the DATA FIELD is
set to 3. I though that this was wrong for an 8k machine. If you look at
the front panel you will see three bits and an additional 2 bits for the
INST FIELD and DATA FIELD. So part of this is for the 8 and all of it is
for the LINC, and it is working correctly.
We recabled the VR14 and TU56. The Local Forward and Reverse switches on
the TU56 do not get the correct behavior from the motors. The Line fuse on
the VR14 blew when we turned it on.
We will replace the fuse and try a slow power up with a Variac.
We received lots of comments on reforming the capacitors in the power
supply and strong recommendations from experts to just replace them. Since
new caps are a different physical size, and would cost about $250 we
decided to continue with reforming the originals. We measured the voltage
ripple on the backplanes near the power connectors.
- +5.0V = 5.01V, 200 mV PTP ripple
- +10.0V = 5.9V, 200 mV PTP ripple
- -15.0V = -14.2V, 800 mV PTP ripple
- -30.0V = -31.2V, 800 mV PTP ripple
The 800mV of ripple on the -30 is a sign that the caps in the power supply
were not working well, and is probably too noisy for the core to work. We
tried to measure the capacitance of the power supply capacitors using an
ancient, but very nice, GenRad capacitor meter, but unfortunately the caps
were too big to measure.
We thought that more power on time for the caps might improve their
behavior, so we started debugging the processor. We found that bits 4 and
11 in the Program Counter were always on.
We looked at the flip-flops on the M221 modules in the processor that make
up the PC register and they the contents matched what was loaded from the
console switches. We need to determine why the indicator lights on the
front panel do not exactly reflect the internal state of the registers in
the processor so we can continue debugging.
After running the system for about four hours the ripple on the -30V was
down to 180mV, so the capacitors are getting better. More run time will
hopefully reduce the ripple to an acceptable level. If not, we will have to
replace them.
--
Michael Thompson
one here but not cheap.
I was happy I got a diablo KSR
I can not even tell you how bad I used to lust after one of those in
1979......
http://www.omnidatasys.net/catalog/printers/texas-Instruments-ti-820-ksr
In a message dated 5/17/2015 12:19:45 P.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
jwest at classiccmp.org writes:
I am looking for a TI 820 or 825 KSR, if anyone has one in good shape with
all keys that they are willing to part with - sale or trade...
J
The 8041 has the same pinout as the Intel 8741 programmable. A Pro-Log M980
PROM Programmer with a PM 9054 personality module can read out the programs
inside.
I did a lot of Intel 8741 Development back in the day and even reverse
engineered the PIO in an Intel MDS-225. I have a MDS-225 now I'm getting
going from pieces.
Richard Main
+1 510-229-9711
Newark, CA USA
This just popped up today:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/LOT-OF-54-USED-VINTAGE-DEC-DIGITAL-COMPACTAPE-TK50-D
ATA-TAPE-CARTRIDGES-SOFTWARE-/221774909736?
It is a bit expensive in my view and shipping to the UK is too much, but I
thought there *might* be some old versions of DEC software on some of those
tapes. I thought of asking about the DEC software myself, but as I know I
wouldn't bid it wouldn't be right for me to ask. Anyone in the USA
interested enough to find out what historical DEC software there might be
and recover the tapes (if possible)?
Regards
Rob
I decided to put the 11/44 on Ebay for $1, no reserve. (currently at
$40.39).
New photos (what is on ebay plus what I took today after opening the
cabinet to see what is in there)
http://vintagecomputer.net/digital/PDP11-44_2nd/
Ebay listing
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Digital-PDP-11-44-/271869650084
Item is pickup only BUT If you can't pick it up but want to make
arrangements to have a shipping company come to pick it up, pack and ship,
I am happy to help but it's on you to make all of the arrangements. I am
available during the work day.
Location - Landenberg, PA which is about 40 minutes South/west of
Philadelphia, about 60 minutes North/east Baltimore, 10 miles or so from
I95 at the MD/Delaware border.
vintagecomputer.net/contact.cfm
Bill
The scrappers are here, clearing out the warehouse.
I saved a box of old DEC and HP boards.
First $100 plus about $35 UPS ground shipping takes them home (in CONUS).
I have no idea if any of them still work, but I pulled them from large
working cabinets I was required to destroy about 18 years ago.
Part numbers are:
M8061
97871 401-33692 Quad Cache qty 3
85-3438-02 Cache memory
M8059FH
M8048 qty 3
M8059FB
M8186 qty 3
Peritek Corporation DMA-Q
97871 MUX qty 5
5020477-01-DC1 Diceon 6A
M8016YB
HP boards:
C-2440-40 2443-9572
5181-5649 Rev A
98257-66524 98257A
33445-60002 A-2745-39
D2237-60001 (no CPU chips)
A1470-66521 16MB memory qty 2
Cindy Croxton
Electronics Plus
1613 Water Street
Kerrville, TX 78028
830-792-3400 phone
sales at elecplus.com
AOL IM elcpls
A correspondent just pointed me to a nice collection of photos of a (the?) 11/74 MP system:
http://oboguev.livejournal.com/2696291.html
I assume this is the one at DEC used by the RSX-11M+ group for their multiprocessor support work. As far as I know these didn?t become a product. I remember the name of the machine as ?Cerberus?, not sure what that label ?daemon? refers to. Maybe a DECnet node name?
paul
Hi
I received a DECpc 433 Workstation today with SCSI expansion box. It's a
small system which reminds me of the VAX VLC, but not quite.
I've not been able to find any manuals online, does anyone have anything?
Regards,
Pontus.
John wrote....
----
I'm still looking for Oregon Software Pascal as well...
----
I said I would look, I did, and it was fruitful.
I have in my hands an original distribution fedex shipping box from Oregon software to my high school (Saint Louis University High) containing:
Oregon Software Pascal-2 Software Development System version 2.1F for RT-11 release package checklist (RN-121, august 1988):
Installation & Release notes
Oregon Language Letter, Summer 1988, announcing two new compilers (Oregon Modula-2 and Oregon C++)
8 SS/SD RX01 format disks containing P-2 RT-11 v2.1F (original, Oregon software labels, including my high schools site/license number)
Oregon Software Field Report form (4 carbon copy)
Misc Notes of my own from a skim of the above:
The compiler version here runs under RT-11 v5 or later
The compiler can run under XM or SJ monitors
Programs compiled with the compiler can run under FB, BL, SJ, or XM
Minimum requirements: EIS. P-2 uses FPP hardware or simulated floating point software (FIS). Also need 3500 blocks to install, and during compilation about 500 blocks are used for temporary storage. Computers with only flexible disk systems do not have enough storage.
I have no idea if these diskettes are still readable. I know my high school was fastidious about making a copy and then locking the masters away so these disks likely only saw one read. I do know that they used this software extensively, and there may well be other copies of these floppies around here.
I'd love to post images of these diskettes, but I don't know the status of Oregon Software and the IP situation.
So in the interest of completeness, anyone have other RT-11 versions of other Oregon Software's compilers?
I also found original S&H distribution copies of TSX+ v5, v6, and v6.2 (again, stamped with my high schools license number).
Best,
J
Dave - - actually there should be a scan out it out there already...
it is of the same vintage as the hp minicomputer handbook with the old
hp-2115 on the front....
Here I found a link to the early version! just enter any word in the
human checker thing and you can download the pdf! there are other hp
2000 things there too at that main url
http://www.hpmuseum.net/capcha/freecap_wrap.php?r=1124
posting the cc also to rest of list for those that would like
this also...
Yea our old one if we opened it to flat bed scan it it would be a
sheaf of lose pages I fear... but this pdf should be good for
info.
We love HP 2000 stuff here it was part of my work in the old days
fixing and selling therm and selling time on them. We still have our
first 2000 system we bought but we NEED THE 2883 disk drive and the hp
version of the GE terminet 300 to put with it.
Ed Sharpe archivist for SMECC _www.smecc.org_ (http://www.smecc.org)
In a message dated 5/16/2015 11:27:44 P.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
jdbryan at acm.org writes:
Hi Ed,
On Saturday, May 16, 2015 at 21:35, COURYHOUSE at aol.com wrote:
> Many Thanks for the HP 1000 interface board manual...
You're welcome.
> We have the old one here at the museum with the 2115, 2116 etc
> but it has gotten brittle on the back binding and if we do not
> have to open it.......
Maybe open it one more time to scan it?
-- Dave
I received this email - contact Alex below if interested:
===================================================================
I'm a reporter for the New York Times and I'm working on a story about vintage tech/computer equipment, particularly when used as items to be displayed, or as home-decor.
Do you know have any collectors of vintage tech who have used it in any creative way as objects around the house?
If you have any thoughts on the topic, I'm all ears. Thanks!
--
Alex Williams
Reporter
The New York Times
212 556 1158
===================================================================
Chuck Guzis wrote:
One more category springs to mind--5xx would be printers (e.g. 501 and
512). Maybe I;m trying to forget about what it was like having a
machine gun on one side (501 drum printer) and a screaming banshee (512
train printer) on the other side.
8xx also includes drum storage.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
To add a little more: 1XX was test equipment; 3XX was paper tape equipment; 7XX was interconnect gear.
Later the numbers were changed to an elaborate code that used 2 Alphanumerics a dash, 3 more alpha numerics. This was later modified to include another dash and alphanumeric. For example, a disk drive might be: BJ-3A4-C.
There is a model decoder somewhere on bitsavers.
And there was a whole family of unique specially designed peripherals called SPAM boxes = Special Purpose Alogrithm Machines. These were usually all electronic. Most were used in the oil industry; for example strip recorders/readers for seismic data.
One I worked on a lot when in Houston, would add up all the one bits in a large field of data. For some applications, the petrol companies loved it.
Inital telecommunication products started here then evolved into their own families.
Chuck, I'll swap you for the time I was at CERN working on 627 (one inch) tape drives and some idiot rewound 24 of them at the same time. It was a gag they pulled on new operators. It could take an hour before you could hear people talk again.
Billy Pettit
Sean Caron <scaron at umich.edu> wrote:
> I remember long ago there used to be a really neat site about the
> VAXstation 3520/3540 machines but it's long gone ...
Any chance you have the URL noted? If so, the WayBackMachine might still
have it.
Noel
Many Thanks for the HP 1000 interface board manual... We have the old
one here at the museum with the 2115, 2116 etc but it has gotten
brittle on the back binding and if we do not have to open it.......
At one time when we would building voice boards to the 2000/1000
series back then we had scored a batch of blank IO proto boards with the
buss tag traces on them.. be interesting to see if I saved any...
Thanks ! Ed# _www.smecc.org_ (http://www.smecc.org)
In a message dated 5/16/2015 3:42:18 P.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
pbirkel at gmail.com writes:
That is a *really* nice document, in so many ways. Thanks for sharing,
and
for the answers to earlier questions :->.
On Thu, May 14, 2015 at 11:31 AM, J. David Bryan <jdbryan at acm.org> wrote:
> On Thursday, May 14, 2015 at 1:46, Paul Birkel wrote:
>
> > What do they recommend on the receiver-end?
>
> LSTTL with a 4.7K pulldown to -2V on the input.
>
>
> > Is the "HP 1000 M/E/F-Series Computers I/O Interfacing Guide"
> > (02109-90006 September 1980) available online somewhere?
>
> I thought I had sent it to Al some years ago, but it's not listed. In
any
> case, I've posted it here:
>
> http://home.earthlink.net/~jdbryan/dropbox/02109-90006_Sep-1980.7z
>
> See chapter 5, pages 5-5 and 5-6.
>
> -- Dave
>
>
All ?
I thought I would pass the attached on to the group. Please let me know if
the attachment (Word doc) doesn?t come through and I?ll send it separately
to those interested. I received the attached email, unsolicited. Looks like
two complete Altair systems for sale for $7,000, with offers considered. No
location is given in the listing but the area code points to Washington
State (Olympia??).
Rich
--
Rich Cini
Collector of Classic Computers
Build Master and lead engineer, Altair32 Emulator
http://www.classiccmp.org/cinihttp://www.classiccmp.org/altair32
From: Richard Cini <rcini at msn.com>
Date: Saturday, May 16, 2015 at 10:54 AM
To: Richard A Cini <rich.cini at verizon.net>
Subject: FW: Altair 8800 Electrical Engineer Estate "lot"
From: ecyclenw at msn.com
To: ecyclenw at msn.com
Subject: Altair 8800 Electrical Engineer Estate "lot"
Date: Fri, 15 May 2015 01:32:57 +0000
Hi,
You are receiving this e-mail due to interest expressed as a collector, on
theantiquecomputer.com.
Please find attached a word document with the information and details of
this Altair 8800 Estate Lot. More photos available.
Also, please pass this information to anyone who may be interested.
Thank You
Dan
Dan Tharp
EcycleNW
dan at ecyclenw.com
ecyclenw at msn.com
Sent from Windows Mail
Am I too late? Still available for sale?
Richard
I really need some cash and some space, so it's time for my Intel Intellec
MDS gear to find a new home. I inherited this kit some years ago, and know
almost nothing about it - in fact, I'm even confused as to the correct
model number; 'experts disagree', it's either an MDS-225 or MDS-800.
It's a large white cube, about 20" on a side, with a CRT, one 8" floppy and
a number of plug-in boards. There is also a blue Intel dual 8" drive, one
seriously heavy-duty keyboard, a few cables and a bevy of 8" floppy discs.
I also have an ICE pod for it, somewhere..
It has never been powered-up once since I've had it, though it was
apparently 'working fine' when retired sometime in the early-mid 1990s.
Cosmetics are very good, it's no ugly duckling by any stretch.
Photos will appear as I'm able to move it to a location with sufficient
light.
*Richard Brewster Main, Esq.*
*Of Counsel*Main Cafe
invention & patent development
Newark, CA 94560
+1 408 409 6246
http://www.maincafe.us/
CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: E-mail may contain *attorney-client confidential
information* that is legally privileged. Do not read this e-mail if you are
not the intended recipient. This e-mail transmission, and any documents,
files or previous e-mail messages attached to it may contain confidential
information that is legally privileged. If you are not the intended
recipient, or a person responsible for delivering it to the intended
recipient, you are hereby notified that any disclosure, copying,
distribution or use of any of the information contained in or attached to
this transmission is STRICTLY PROHIBITED. If you have received this
transmission in error, delete it, please immediately notify us by reply
e-mail to mainpatents at gmail.com or contacting us by telephone at
408-409-6246
F.Ulivi,
I have an MDS-225 on a breadboard for easy access. I bought it in
pieces and now getting it going. I believe I may be able to dump all
the EPROMS in my Pro-Log M980 and het hexfiles over USB-232 to my
WINDOWS laptop to email to you.
I just got the Intel 2708 personality module for the Pro-Log and not
sure its working.
On the built in CRT, Intel used the Ball Brothers TV120 with an early
VGA interface. It is TTL with /VERT, HORIZ, and VIDEO. You can wire up
a modern DB25 VGA monitor to the IOC and hook each of R G B through
270 ohm resistors to IOC VIDEO. maybe need to invert the vertical
sync.
Richard
I'm looking for the images of ROMs installed on the IOC (I/O controller)
board of Intel MDS-2 development systems. In particular I'm looking for
the content of the character generator ROM (A19-2708) and of firmware
ROMs (A50 to A53-4x2716). So far I had no success in googling them.
My goal would be to contribute a good emulation of MDS systems to MESS,
especially for what regards the look of the video terminal. Well, this
is the plan, when "real-life" is not inteferring too much...
*Richard Brewster Main, Esq.*
*Of Counsel*Main Cafe
invention & patent development
Newark, CA 94560
+1 408 409 6246
http://www.maincafe.us/
CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: E-mail may contain *attorney-client confidential
information* that is legally privileged. Do not read this e-mail if you are
not the intended recipient. This e-mail transmission, and any documents,
files or previous e-mail messages attached to it may contain confidential
information that is legally privileged. If you are not the intended
recipient, or a person responsible for delivering it to the intended
recipient, you are hereby notified that any disclosure, copying,
distribution or use of any of the information contained in or attached to
this transmission is STRICTLY PROHIBITED. If you have received this
transmission in error, delete it, please immediately notify us by reply
e-mail to mainpatents at gmail.com or contacting us by telephone at
408-409-6246
Hi Eric,
I reverse engineered the Intel IOC in my MDS-225 back in 1980 and
designed/programmed the Zendex equivalent. Your project sounds interesting.
I just got a MDS-225 in pieces that I'm getting fired up with DD dual 8"
floppies and ISIS-II.
Got any parts or need any parts?
Richard Main
Newark, CA USA
+1 510-229-9711
I picked up an Olivetti M24 the other day. When I opened it up I found a
"Fox Research LAN Interface" dated 1984. I have not been able to find any
information on this card. It has a make DE-9 connector with only 3 pins
(technically does that make it a DE-3?). Can anyone give me any details of
this interface?
The machine does not have the expansion board, and it is missing one of the
floppy disk drives. It also does not have a hard disk controller. If anyone
has any of these bits going spare I would love to hear from you.
Thanks
Rob
Hi *Dave Mabry,*
*I have an Intel MDS-225 that I'm getting up and running. I have quite a
bit of experience with these from back in 1980's when I developed a lot of
Intel SBC boards and wrote ASM-80 assembler on the MDS. I have a complete
double density dual drive Intel disk for it and will be up and running
ISIS-II on this soon.*
*What parts, software are you looking for? What do you have to sell?*
*Richard Main 510-229-9711*
>> it looks like the backplane blocks .. are cast around them
> From: Brent Hilpert
> all have secured the pin in the housing via some deformation of the metal
> pin, post-insertion; as opposed to moulding the housing around the pin.
> From: Ethan Dicks
> these are cast blocks of plastic with embedded pins.
> From: Jon Elson
> On some of the connectors, the pins are pressed in from the card side.
There appears to be some question as to whether thyy are cast in place,
or inserted.
Actually, I started to wonder about my assertion shortly after I posted it,
and took another look at the backplane. The thing is that the hollows that
the finger contact pins are in are fairly complicated (since they allow the
contact pins to move back and forth, but hold them from going too far), and
I'm really wondering if it would be possible to cast that shape, and then
remove the mold, and also have the pin in there. So I'm wondering if in fact
they weren't inserted post-casting.
> From: Brent Hilpert
> The problem in your situation of course, is getting the remainder of
> the pin out from between the edge connector housing and the backplane
> PCB without having to unsolder the entire connector.
Well, I'm kind of assuming they are inserted from the edge-connector side,
and not the wira-wrap pin side (what with the contact pins being bent, etc on
the edge-connector side), If they _were_ inserted from the wire-wrap pin
side, I'm totally @&@^$#%@&^, there's no way to get that PCB off now.
So in theory, at least, I'd have to de-solder them from the PCB and then try
and push the remaining part back through (after identifying and defeating
whatever the capture mechanism is - which I might not be able to reach with
the PCB in the way). And then I'd have to find replacement pins and put them
in. Both of those sound non-trivial.
(All assuming, of course, that they are inserted post-casting, and not
cast into place... still not sure about that.)
This has assumed a little extra urgency as on closer examination, some of the
pins in the UNIBUS in-out area are clearly very weak - I imagine there's only
a tiny bit of metal holding the contact pin in place, and it could break off
any time. And I won't be so lucky as to have them all be ground pins..
So if one breaks off, the backplane is toast (unless it's the the last thing
on the UNIBUS, it could be kludged - i.e. attach the termination/ pull-up
directly to the wire-wrap pin).
Which I guess is not the end of the world - DD11's aren't _that_ rare...
Noel
Do we know where theses drives are ( located ) ??
---
L'absence de virus dans ce courrier ?lectronique a ?t? v?rifi?e par le logiciel antivirus Avast.
http://www.avast.com
Forgive the interruption...
I am trying to get a hold of Wayne Smith. I sent him an e-mail a couple
days ago but he has not responded. Is he lurking here? If so, please
contact me.
Thank you!
--
Sellam ibn Abraham VintageTech
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
International Man of Intrigue and Danger http://www.vintagetech.com
Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap. The truth is always simple.
* * * NOTICE * * *
Due to the insecure nature of the medium over which this message has
been transmitted, no statement made in this writing may be considered
reliable for any purpose either express or implied. The contents of
this message are appropriate for entertainment and/or informational
purposes only. The right of the people to be secure in their papers
against unreasonable searches and seizures shall not be violated.
I got a private email (I suspect many of you did too) regarding a sizeable
altair setup (and other accoutrements) being offered up out of an estate
sale.
>From a quick scan, I don't see that this made it to the list. Just in case,
I'm reposting brief info here and a link for more info.
Email:
Hi,
You are receiving this e-mail due to interest expressed as a collector, on
theantiquecomputer.com.
Please find attached a word document with the information and details of
this Altair 8800 Estate Lot. More photos available.
Also, please pass this information to anyone who may be interested.
Thank You
Dan
Dan Tharp
EcycleNW
dan at ecyclenw.com
ecyclenw at msn.com
Also - the attached file (which I cant send to the list, I don't allow
attachments) has been placed at http://www.ezwind.net/altair
It is a word document, but it has embedded pictures and such.
Best,
J
Dave,
Thanks a million! I did not know that. As for the receivers, it can go into
straight TTL apparently, I read that somewhere in an HP manual.
Marc
>From: "J. David Bryan" <jdbryan at acm.org>
>> ...where to get the older CTuL logic IC bus drivers (the 9956 in
>> particular) besides from old boards?
>With the inclusion of a pulldown resistor to -2V, the TI SN75121 is a
recommended replacement, per page 5-6 of the
>"HP 1000 M/E/F-Series Computers I/O Interfacing Guide" (02109-90006
September 1980). It's an active part:
> http://www.ti.com/product/sn75121
> -- Dave
Boy, if you don't know, then who is... But this brings up another good
point, where to get the older CTuL logic IC bus drivers (the 9956 in
particular) besides from old boards? I'll probably need a few to make my own
I/O boards, else I'll have make my own level converters out of SMD
components...
Marc
>From: "Jay West" <jwest at classiccmp.org>
>Subject: HP board id?
>It seems over the years I acquired more than a just a few of these (two
>types of) boards for the HP1000. I'm pretty certain they all came from a
>batch of about twenty HP 1000 series systems I got that were decommissioned
>from military use. They do not seem to be HP in origin, and I don't have
>any
>clue what they are for. Mostly they seem to be stuffed with large numbers
>of
>op amps and some line drivers. Perhaps just flight line testing or ATP?
> If no one thinks these are of any use. they will be scavenged for bus
> driver chips. But I'd hate to do that if they might be historical or
> "interesting".
>A few pictures of each board are at www.ezwind.net/hp-unk
>Educated guesses?
This grew out of off-list correspondence about the
card punch I'd mentioned on here recently; I
thought it might amuse some folks or just possibly
even be interesting:
----- Original Message -----
> On Tue, May 5, 2015 at 10:11 PM, Mike Stein
> <mhs.stein at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I've got a crazy idea; are you handy
> mechanically and electronically?
>
> I've got a couple of mag card readers; I think
> it would be a most awesome kludge to turn one
> into a punched card reader ;-)
>
> On the other hand, one of my PPT readers also
> reads EPCs (Edge Punched cards)...
>
> m
----------
> From: Kyle Owen
> To: Mike Stein
> Sent: Wednesday, May 06, 2015 11:23 AM
> Subject: Re: Fw: Wright card punch
>
> Hey Mike,
>
> I'm certainly more handy when it comes to
> electronics than mechanics, though I've dabbled
> in a bit of everything it feels like.
>
> What kind of mag card readers do you have? And I
> assume PPT is punched paper tape? I guess I
> haven't seen too many EPCs in my time. What were
> they used for?
>
> Kyle
-----------------
Hi Kyle,
I wasn't entirely serious about the mag card
readers, but it's not a totally ridiculous idea
either.
They're sort of like a linear floppy disk: Imagine
a credit card reader like the one at your local
ATM that sucks in the card and spits it out, but
the card is the size and shape of an 80 column
punched card but made from more or less the same
material as a floppy disk.
The tracks are straight and lengthwise instead of
concentric and they're read the same way as your
credit card, with a stepper mechanism to select a
specific track across the width (height?) of the
card either under computer control or manually
(note the < and > buttons on the front).
Remove the track-select stepper mechanism, add a
light source and an array of 12 photo sensors (or
a mechanical contact of some sort) and you've got
a one-at-a-time card reader; it's even already got
a couple of photo sensors ;-)
As usual with the old stuff (and most of the
'real' punched card readers) the feed rollers look
a little rough, although it looks like you could
probably make new ones out of wood or plastic and
just put a rubber band around them.
Pity I'm getting rid of the punch or I might
actually try it myself for a lark.
EPCs are really just punched cards of various
sizes but instead of using the whole area of the
card the data is punched along the bottom edge
just like paper tape; they're usually read by
normal PPT readers that have a special guide for
the card.
Pictures of the mag card reader here:
http://s1056.photobucket.com/user/dm561/library/?view=recent&page=1
> From: Bill Degnan
> Accepting best offer for a PDP 11/44 located in Landenberg, PA.
Before Bill's mailbox explodes, he has listed this on eBay, and it will sell
there. (Note, he has it listed local pickup only.)
Noel
I have a VAXStation 3520 I'd like to upgrade a bit (because why not) -- if
anyone has any spares they'd be willing to sell/trade for, let me know.
I'm looking for additional memory (I have only 8mb) or an extra dual
processor board (so I can have a quad-processor VAX, which sounds fun).
Thanks as always,
Josh
I have a very strong suspicion that the answer to this is going to be 'no',
but I figured I'd do due diligence and ask...
I have a backplane (one of the rodent barn group) which has a couple of finger
contacts in the backplane missing. (Two came out while I was cleaning it - and
I wasn't being hard on them, they must have been eaten away by the same kind
of chemical action that lifted traces off the boards.)
Is there any way to replace broken/missing finger contacts? I would _guess_
'no', since it looks like the backplane blocks (the things cast out of dark
green plastic, which looks like Bakelite - anyone know exactly what it is,
BTW?) are cast around them (since there's a wire-wrap pin on one side, and a
finger contact on the other).
If the answer _is_ 'no', no biggie - all except one are on one SPC slot, and
it's a 9-slot backplane, so we'd lose one SPC slot - not the end of the world.
The other pin is in the UNIBUS in/out area (1/9AB), _but_ the antique hardware
gods are smiling on us, it's a ground pin (of which the UNIBUS connector
pinout has multiple, so we can probably withstand the loss of one).
Thanks in advance for any help!
Noel
A new AT&T video out today showing their (at the time, the Bell
System's) internal CAD and messaging system, TOPES:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VKbFM770dus
Not a lot of info out there about it but it appears to have run on
DEC-10 machines. There are a none of those to be seen in the video
but there are a few AT&T/Teletype Dataspeed and Tektronix terminals.
Interesting early collaboration system that probably never left Bell -
did anyone here work with it?
-j
Accepting best offer for a PDP 11/44 located in Landenberg, PA. Pickup or
your arrangements to have shipped ONLY. I am not going to ship this thing.
I have not powered it on - first I would need to remove the deteriorated
foam behind the front grill and get a 220 adapter (i.e. clothes dryer
plug).
http://vintagecomputer.net/digital/PDP11-44_2nd/
The cabinet has a little rust on the outside but the computer backplane
itself is in pretty nice shape and the module set appears complete. The
inside bottom of the cabinet is dirty but by and large it's pretty nice.
The cabinet has two tape drive bays in the front and a tape drive inside
that I assume to be inoperable, the capstan roller appears to be
deteriorated.
Happy to answer questions here but I prefer private contact/bids/questions
to - http://vintagecomputer.net/contact.cfm
thanks
Bill
Here's the list of equipment.
I also have the keyboards, mice, cables, media, manuals, etc.
Hardware Model
Number Serial Number Comments
AXP 3000 Model 500S D5-PE500-AB
AB2420476G very heavy (~55 lbs?)
(internal boards were static bagged separately from system
when moved from original location at work)
MicroVAX 3100 DV-31ATB-B-A01
KA037D0073 - no other details -
DEC Concentrator (FDDI) DEFCN-BC
AS24103079 1 - 4 Port card and cables
DEC FDDI Controller (PCI) DEFPA-UA
TA52900037 never used, w/ driver disk
DEC FDDI Controller (PCI) DEFPA-UA
TA55000002 never used, w/ driver disk
VT320 Amber monitor TA927Y4967 (?)
59333248 - in VERY GOOD condition -
VRT19 Color monitor VRT19-HA Rev B01
IS336820281 very heavy (~78 lbs?)
.
I cannot ship anything, if you can't pick it up at my house, you'll have to
pay shipping.
Let me know.
Hi all,
I've got a VAX4000/300 lately to save it from the dumpster.
I've cleaned the machine an powered up. It taked several tries
to get the PSU working stable, it shut off itself the first ~10 tries
but works stable now.
(Yes I know all about forming electrolytic caps but have my own point of
view regarding supplying under voltage to switching psu's)
The machine is doing the Post until the final displayed letter "3" in
the LED Display.
The machine is equipped with 64MB RAM, an KA670, and on the QBUS with the
KZQSA DSSI and the TK70 Controllers and additional am CMD CQD200.
Disks are 2x RF31 one RF71 and a TK70.
I currently have no console device connected to the machine, must crimp a
MMJ cable first..
The Problem ist, that one of the RF31 Disks doesnt go to ready and the
Fault LED lights up.
What can I do to further investigate the Drive fault?
Are DSSI disks starting up themselves after applying Power and ACLO or
has the controller to supply a spindle start command?
re those disks known to have sticking heads sometimes?
I would do some test on the drive w/o the machine since I don't have any
test equipment in the room where the machine now is..
Any hints?
If anyone has a spare RF31 or RF71 (or similar) to sell or additional MS670
memory for an hobbyist price, please mail me. I'm in germany, europe.
Regards,
Holm
--
Technik Service u. Handel Tiffe, www.tsht.de, Holm Tiffe,
Freiberger Stra?e 42, 09600 Obersch?na, USt-Id: DE253710583
www.tsht.de, info at tsht.de, Fax +49 3731 74200, Mobil: 0172 8790 741
I'd like to thank everyone who responded to my recent post about my computer board collection. The amount of interest is much greater than I had expected, so it has been taking me a little bit of time to sift through emails and contact everyone.
If you have not heard from me by now, I've made an error and overlooked you. Please accept my apologies and send me another query.
Let me reiterate--I have no asking price for these assets--I have no idea what they're worth and I'm happy that they're going into the hands of people who will appreciate them.
If you are interested in specific cards, please make an offer. There is more interest than there are cards, so the only fair way I can distribute them is on the basis of the offers.
Regards and 73,
Pete
AC7ZL
What a beauty! Congrats folks!Ed#
Sent from my Verizon Wireless 4G LTE smartphone
-------- Original message --------
From: Michael Thompson <michael.99.thompson at gmail.com>
Date: 05/12/2015 4:30 PM (GMT-07:00)
To: cctech <cctech at classiccmp.org>
Subject: Re: PDP-12 Restoration at the RICM
>
> Date: Mon, 11 May 2015 10:17:41 -0700
> From: "Kirk B Davis" <kirkbdavis at hush.com>
> Subject: Re: PDP-12 Restoration at the RICM
>
> Pictures?? :-)
>
http://www.ricomputermuseum.org/Home/equipment/dec-pdp-12
--
Michael Thompson
It seems over the years I acquired more than a just a few of these (two
types of) boards for the HP1000. I'm pretty certain they all came from a
batch of about twenty HP 1000 series systems I got that were decommissioned
>from military use. They do not seem to be HP in origin, and I don't have any
clue what they are for. Mostly they seem to be stuffed with large numbers of
op amps and some line drivers. Perhaps just flight line testing or ATP?
If no one thinks these are of any use. they will be scavenged for bus driver
chips. But I'd hate to do that if they might be historical or "interesting".
A few pictures of each board are at www.ezwind.net/hp-unk
I tossed in the "-" because hpunk just looked wrong ;)
Educated guesses?
J
>
> Date: Mon, 11 May 2015 17:57:44 +0200
> From: Pontus Pihlgren <pontus at Update.UU.SE>
> Subject: Re: PDP-12 Restoration at the RICM
> On Mon, May 11, 2015 at 09:36:17AM -0600, Doug Ingraham wrote:
> > I have read that there was a device that allowed an 8/I to be interfaced
> to
> > Omnibus memory and some machines were sold this way but I have never seen
> > one.
> >
>
> I've sen one :) which is why I wondered. I've also heard of a
> straight-8 with omnibus memory.
>
> /P
>
Its called a BM812. Prints on Bitsavers at:
/pdf/dec/pdp8/omnibus/BM812-I_EngrDrws_Jun75.pdf
--
Michael Thompson
I recall back in the late 70s using an IBM 029 Card Punch to punch cards for
the DECSYSTEM-20.
As I understand it, the 029 was an EBCDIC machine, but of course the
DECSYSTEM-20 was ASCII.
Does that mean there was an ASCII version of the 029, or that there was
something in the card reader software on TOPS-20 that converted EBCDIC to
ASCII?
Regards
Rob
>Message: 6
>Date: Mon, 11 May 2015 17:41:16 +0000
>From: tony duell <ard at p850ug1.demon.co.uk>
>Subject: RE: VCF Ban, Vector Graphic cards, Wright card punch, MDS
>Keyboard
<snip>
>My biggest worry is that my will will not be found and/or my next of kin will not
>get contacted. He isn't a relative of mine, just a very close friend. He is the
>beneficiary of my will and the exector, but if this is not realised he might not
>get what he should. I am wondering if there is some way of ensuring he gets told
>if anything should happen to me (not that I am planning anything like that, but...)
>
>-tony
Probably the best thing you can do is let the next of kin know that you have a will and either give them a copy or tell them what your wishes are. Then put a copy of the will where it can easily be found (such as in your desk drawer). My wife and I are redoing our will and are letting our sons and my brothers know what we are planning. They all will know where to look for the official copy of the will.
Bob
Folks,
I started working on an AT&T 3B2 emulator using the SIMH platform late
last year. As these things often do, it got side-tracked by life. We
moved to Washington state in January, and I've been consumed with
other matters since then.
I'd like to finally get back to the 3B2 emulator. Having physical
access to a real 3B2 would make this process much, much easier,
especially one I could put custom homebrew ROMs into.
If you have any 3B2s you'd be willing to let me borrow or buy, please
drop me a line. I'm located about an hour from Seattle, WA in Kitsap
County.
Or, if you're interested in a trade, I have some PDP-11 Qbus gear I'd
be willing to part with, too.
-Seth
Hello,
I've managed to image some of the SC-40 drives (currently just for
personal backup use due to any legal issues/possible customer data).
I've found in the documentation references to a file named COUGH.DRP which
seems to be the CompuServe equivalent of the TOPS-10 Monitor Calls Guide.
Does anyone have a copy of the CompuServe COUGH DROPS file scurried away
somewhere? It would be very useful in discerning the patches to TOPS-10
and some SC-40 extensions.
--
Cory Smelosky
http://gewt.net Personal stuff
http://gimme-sympathy.org Projects
Holm Tiffe wrote:
> Yes guys, it's true.
> I've successfully "repaired" the drive with an careful hit from a
> rubber-hammer!
I am pretty blown away! Hard to believe that a disk can be fixed with that
kind of treatment!
But I shouldn't be. Remember that scene in one of the early Stars Wars movies
where they go to make the jump to hyperspace (or something like that), and
nothing happens, and Hans gets up and whacks the bulkhead in a very
particular spot, and then it works?
I first saw that movie with a couple of people from the MIT computer lab, and
we were all convulsed with laughter at that scene. One of our mainframes had
a sticky power relay, and when you hit the 'power off' on the front console,
nothing would happen. So you'd walk around to the back of the machine, open a
door, and give a particular box a good whack in a particular way with your
fist, and it would power off.
Some things just never change!
Noel
Hi have a boxed CDC 721 Plato terminal, making room so need to
sell/trade it. Its VERY heavy and would prefer someone pick it up.
Please contact me off list - curtv2015 at gmail.com
Thanks,
Curt
Some time back I acquired a Zilog Z8-02 MPD. This is the bond-out
version of the Z8 microcontroller. The normal Z8 contained 2K of
internal masked ROM and was packaged in a 40-pin DIP. The Z8-02 had no
masked ROM (or possibly the masked ROM was disabled), and the address
and data buses for the internal ROM, along with a few clock and
control signals, were brought out to the extra 24 pins of a 64-contact
ceramic leadless quad-in-line package (QUIP). Typically for emulation
it would be used with a 2716 EPROM, or 2KB of RAM with address and
data multiplexers for a fancy emulator.
The ceramic leadless QUIP package was used for bondouts from Intel and
Zilog, and later, for the Intel iAPX 432 components. Later it was
replaced with the square JEDEC ceramic leadless package. Note that the
ceramic leadless QUIP is unrelated to the more common leaded QUIP
packages used by NEC, Rockwell, and Motorola.
Unlike many modern leadless packages (DFN, QFN, BGA), the ceramic
leadless QUIP is intended for use only in a socket, which was made by
3M. Today the sockets are even harder to find than the chips that
require them.
I designed a simple QUIP adapter for use with solderless breadboards,
and wired up a Z8-02 MPD along with a 28C16 EEPROM for the program
memory, a 62256 static RAM, address latch, and decoder. I programmed a
copy of the Z8671 Basic/Debug interpreter into the EEPROM. To my
amazement, it worked the first time.
Photos:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/22368471 at N04/sets/72157652653732622
The last "photo" is a screen shot of Kermit talking to it. I've
entered an inefficient program to search for primes, and the screen
shot shows it being LISTed, RUN, and then stopped after a few primes
have been found.
Not shown, I printed the value of some of the interpreter's globals,
to verify that the static RAM was recognized properly. (The
interpreter can actually provide minimal functionality with no
external memory!)
While Zilog only claimed it to be a subset of Dartmouth BASIC, the
interpreter does not include the FOR statement, so IMNSHO it barely
even qualifies to be considered a "tiny BASIC".
The competing National Semiconductor INS8073 had 2.5K of ROM, and
Intel 8052AH-BASIC had 8K, so they supported more features of BASIC.
Perfect timing! My new old HP 1000 is coming in a few days and it's missing
some of the cards you have. I'll take your HP 1000 cards if we can agree on
price. I will contact you off-line.
Marc
>From: HP Friedrichs <hpfparts at yahoo.com>
>Subject: HP-1000 and PDP computer parts available
>I have a sizable collection of HP-1000 circuit cards, as well as a couple
>of PDP cards.
>They take up a lot of space in my workshop, so I'd like to find a home for
>them.
>Please see my web site here for a complete list of parts:
>The H.P. Friedrichs (AC7ZL) Homepage
>Thanks and 73,PeteAC7ZL
> View on www.hpfriedrichs.com
FREE Commodore Amiga 1084S Monitor. You just pay shipping. Needs some
soldering on the video connector and the power switch. Otherwise it
works fine
Located in Farwell Michigan.
You can pick it up or pay shipping
Steve
I really couldn't think how best to word the subject. I pulled the CRT out
of the HP 1331 X-Y display that I got the other day, then took all the old
tape off, cleaned it up, and reassembled with new tape. It's no longer
arcing around the CRT face, which is good.
However, there's a flexible plastic strip running between the CRT face and
the chassis which carries three lines (it's a storage tube rather than a
conventional CRT) and I'm still getting periodic arcing across these lines
which of course upsets the display's operation. As far as I can tell,
there's no 'sandwich' (and hence glue) involved - it's just a single
plastic strip with conductive traces drawn onto it.
Does anyone have experience of these kinds of strips in an HV environment,
and what (if anything) can be done for them when they start to fail?
Possibilities seem to be:
1) Try some more cleaning,
2) Reworking with conductive paint (I wondered if one or more of the traces
have gone high resistance in certain spots and this is encouraging the HV
to arc between them 'upstream' of such areas),
3) Plastic itself has broken down in some way, requiring replacement; has
anyone managed to make a replacement strip from scratch?
Although I've not tried the actual X/Y/Z inputs yet, basic
write/store/erase functionality and beam movement via the front X/Y
controls seems to be working so long as the arcing isn't occurring, and
it'd be a fun little gadget to get working.
cheers
Jules
> From: Jules Richardson
> ... "splice tape" is rated for close to 22kV.
> Of course that's *through the tape* though, so although it would
> insulate the conductors from the outside world, it's not clear how
> effective it would be at insulating the two conductors that are only a
> couple of mm apart; the tape doesn't really play a part in that
> scenario, only the glue.
Maybe I'm misunderstanding something, but why not apply a layer of tape
immediately on top of the conductors - since a thickness of .X of a mm
(through) will insulate 22KV, Y mm (across - where Y is the distance between
the conductors) definitely ought to do it.
Although there is the glue that holds it down - I wasn't sure if that was the
glue you were referring to, or if you meant some other glue - that might not
be as insulating (or maybe it is, just don't know).
But, anyway, if the glue might be an issue, you'd have to apply the tape
non-glue side down (and stick something like regular electrical tape to it,
glue-glue, to nullify its glue on the now-up-facing side - unless you want to
use that to join the two layers of the original together). As to how to get it
to adhere: if you can figure out what the insulating glue was that they used
originally, or some modern facsimile thereof, you could use that.
Noel
Bought this for TimmyNet but its too big for what we need
Its an IBM 42U Rack, Needs cage nuts
Comes with 8 2 U Rackmount cases for a whole $100
Come get it out of my basement
Located in Farwell Michigan
> Value is always in the eye of the beholder, and price is always
> and only set between buyer and seller.
>
> If you're hoarding stuff that has no value - then you're just a hoarder.
Those 2 statements partially contradict each other IMHO. Something may
not have much financial value, it does not mean that my heir does not
want to inherit it.
> If you're concerned that valuable stuff might be tossed after your
> death, and sad that no one will inherit the valuable stuff, then
> today you should be able to document and mark its value.
Provided my next-of-kin gets to hear about it in time there is no problem,
in that he will know what is worth saving. So my problem is to ensure that
he is notified in the event of my death, and I am wondering how to do this.
-tony
>
> Perhaps a method we can all avoid Leicas in the Dumpster is to put a
> price tag on everything before you go. Even the simplest Dumpster-tossing
> cleanup person / relative understands a dollar sign.
I think that means we all need to own Leicas to start with. How many would make
me greedy?
My biggest worry is that my will will not be found and/or my next of kin will not
get contacted. He isn't a relative of mine, just a very close friend. He is the
beneficiary of my will and the exector, but if this is not realised he might not
get what he should. I am wondering if there is some way of ensuring he gets told
if anything should happen to me (not that I am planning anything like that, but...)
-tony
Great!
-------- Messaggio originale --------
Da: Christian Corti <cc at informatik.uni-stuttgart.de>
Data:15/04/2015 10:44 (GMT+01:00)
A: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts" <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Oggetto: Re: IBM 5120 Operator Training Manual - GA34-0132-1
On Wed, 15 Apr 2015, supervinx wrote:
> Do you know if somehone has scanned this manual?
> A search gave no result...
You're lucky! I've found this manual. I'll scan it.
Christian
I HAVE A 6026 TAPE FOR THE NOVA 312 SYSTEM IF YOU ARE INTERESTED..
We are located in the Minneapolis area. 952-715-1366
> At 04:06 AM 8/8/2014, Tommie Mademark wrote:
>>Data General Nova 3/12 and 6026 Tape Drive in Tucson, AZ on Craigslist
>> https://tucson.craigslist.org/sys/4591315871.html
>
> Looks like it's still available?
>
> http://tucson.craigslist.org/sys/5017009683.html
>
> - John
>
>
Hi guys,
I have to make a console cable for the VAX4000/300 and an VT420 Terminal.
How are the pins to be connected? One to One or with an rollover
(1-6,2-5,4-3)?
Regards,
Holm
--
Technik Service u. Handel Tiffe, www.tsht.de, Holm Tiffe,
Freiberger Stra?e 42, 09600 Obersch?na, USt-Id: DE253710583
www.tsht.de, info at tsht.de, Fax +49 3731 74200, Mobil: 0172 8790 741
Rescued a keyboard from the dump earlier which is about the same style/size
as an IBM model F, only a darker grey color (and not a buckling spring mech).
Layout-wise, there are no F-keys at all, but keys on the numeric keypad are
labeled things such as 'pan', 'curs', 'local', 'dejag', 'vern', and then
there are eight status LEDs above the keyboard area (on-line, local,
interp, busy, pan, cursor, dejag, 2nd).
Does this critter sound familiar to anyone? I didn't see anything at the
dump that it obviously belonged with, but I may return tomorrow and
double-check, and knowing what I was looking for might be helpful. Of
course it's possible that whatever it hooked up to is long-gone, or even
had already been hauled off from the drop-off area for processing.
cheers
Jules
> From: HP Friedrichs
> I have .. a couple of PDP cards.
> Please see my web site here for a complete list of parts:
Here's the URL:
http://www.hpfriedrichs.com/hpfparts/hpfparts.htm
About the DEC cards: the M8043 is a DLV11-J (a four-port serial card), and
the M8059 is an MSV11-L (up to 256KB memory card - but I'm trying to get that
one).
Noel
>
> I have to make a console cable for the VAX4000/300 and an VT420 Terminal.
> How are the pins to be connected? One to One or with an rollover
> (1-6,2-5,4-3)?
>
As far as I understand it, pretty much all MMJ sockets are wired the same
and the crossover between transmit and receive normally happens in the cable
so you need the rollover.
Even if this is not true in 100% of cases, it does appear to be true at least
in the case of connecting terminals to hosts.
Regards,
Peter Coghlan.
I have a sizable collection of HP-1000 circuit cards, as well as a couple of PDP cards.
They take up a lot of space in my workshop, so I'd like to find a home for them.
Please see my web site here for a complete list of parts:
The H.P. Friedrichs (AC7ZL) Homepage
Thanks and 73,PeteAC7ZL
| ? |
| ? | | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? |
| The H.P. Friedrichs (AC7ZL) HomepageThe Homepage of H. P. Friedrichs |
| |
| View on www.hpfriedrichs.com | Preview by Yahoo |
| |
| ? |
Re: RT11 / RSTS-E games
I obviously have done something wrong when moving files about etc. Hence
depending on which way you get there, they may not link.
For now all the games I have are available here:
http://www.saracom.com/pdp11/pdp11.htm
thanks
Max
------------------------------ Message: 35 Date: Thu, 7 May 2015
19:42:52 -0400 From: Ethan Dicks <ethan.dicks at gmail.com> To: "General
Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts" <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Subject: Re: RT11 / RSTS-E games Message-ID:
<CAALmim=yauqgpg7hc_4vN=1d41WtEA=MPS0P8=4wjNav-4c3TA at mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 On Thu, May 7, 2015 at 5:34 PM,
Peter Coghlan <cctalk at beyondthepale.ie> wrote:
> Lyle Bickley wrote: Ethan Dicks <ethan.dicks at gmail.com> wrote: This one? Appears to be a bad link :(
Try http://pdp11.saracom.com/games/spcinv.zip [1] instead.
Nice catch.
Thanks!
-ethan
Links:
------
[1] http://pdp11.saracom.com/games/spcinv.zip
I have a Xerox 820-II with CP/M 2.2, monitor, dual disk drive, keyboard, daisy wheel printer, manuals, and cables. Wondering if anyone is interested in saving it from the dump, OBO. Bad news, I powered it up recently and the screen flickered and jumped for about 5 minutes before the wisp of smoke. The visible damage is a film capacitor on what looks like a power supply board in the monitor. Five years ago it powered up and was working as far as I could tell. Baltimore, Maryland area (USA). Not a list subscriber, will check list daily for a while, then weekly...
Dave
Anyone have any literature on the Vermont Research 5017?
It was a cartridge drive shipped from 1975 until 1985 probably rebadged and
sold under some system manufacturer's label. Most likely the first HDD to
use embedded servo in a production drive.
Tom
I just posted the winners for the Type ?n Run contest for April on RetroBattlestations. Lots of very interesting programs that people submitted. Entries came in for a variety of computers like the IBM PC, the BBC Micro, the TRS-80 CoCo, and even one for the Texas Instruments CC-40!
Check out all the entries, and maybe submit a program of your own! The Type ?n Run contest is an ongoing challenge with winners selected every month.
http://redd.it/35ht9w
--
Follow me on twitter: @FozzTexx
Check out my blog: http://insentricity.com
naw.... the card reader read punches and the reader driver made it
readable on your machine! !
there were some for hp-2000 also and ho 3000 we would love to find
one for the smecc museum here in az if anyone has an HP setup!
Ed Sharpe archivist for SMECC
In a message dated 5/10/2015 1:56:51 A.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
robert.jarratt at ntlworld.com writes:
I recall back in the late 70s using an IBM 029 Card Punch to punch cards
for
the DECSYSTEM-20.
As I understand it, the 029 was an EBCDIC machine, but of course the
DECSYSTEM-20 was ASCII.
Does that mean there was an ASCII version of the 029, or that there was
something in the card reader software on TOPS-20 that converted EBCDIC to
ASCII?
Regards
Rob
Just another video showing one of my units for anyone who might be
interested.
I was lucky to get this one in such a clean undamaged condition. It did
require some work to get it into shape for this video though. Bad solder
joints on the analogue board...it's almost a standard feature of these
machines, just like leaky caps in the later models!
Anyway...
https://youtu.be/v_m2sfcDDvg
Terry (Tez)
Chuck Guzis wrote:
Really great (7 track) drives; substantially over-engineered as compared
to, say, a 65x drive. The 604 wasn't quite as fast as the look=alike
607, but nothing to sneeze at. If you've got 160A, 3000-series or
6000-series machine (and associated controller), it'd be a really great
drive to have.
--Chuck
____________________________________________________________
These were great tape drives. The 604 was 75ips versus 150ips for the 607. Both drives were 200/556/800 bpi 7 track units.
The weight was a killer. But they were extremely reliable, easy to work on and easy to interface. Al has manuals on them (I know because I loaned them to him) and I have a lot spare parts if someone wanted to try to get them working.
These would be a good choice for recovering old 7 track tapes. They used vacuum tensioning columns and vacuum capstans. So very little contact with the magnetic slurry side of the tape.
Billy Pettit
Chuck Guzis wrote:
Really great (7 track) drives; substantially over-engineered as compared
to, say, a 65x drive. The 604 wasn't quite as fast as the look=alike
607, but nothing to sneeze at. If you've got 160A, 3000-series or
6000-series machine (and associated controller), it'd be a really great
drive to have.
--Chuck
____________________________________________________________
These were great tape drives. The 604 was 75ips versus 150ips for the 607. Both drives were 200/556/800 bpi 7 track units.
The weight was a killer. But they were extremely reliable, easy to work on and easy to interface. Al has manuals on them (I know because I loaned them to him) and I have a lot spare parts if someone wanted to try to get them working.
These would be a good choice for recovering old 7 track tapes. They used vacuum tensioning columns and vacuum capstans. So very little contact with the magnetic slurry side of the tape.
Billy Pettit
> From: William Donzelli
> We, the big iron collectors, do not share this information on any sort
> of registry. We are a secretive bunch.
Why is that, can I ask? I mean, it's not like a thief's going to come in and
steal the thing (which is indeed the reason why collectors in other areas are
often secretive) - it would take a truck and a crane, for most models!
> From: Liam Proven
> Have you read Lawrence Wilkison's account of rescuing an S360/20 in NZ
> when he was a student?
Cool story; thanks for the link - but the page says it was a 360/30. (The
smallest 'real' 360 - the 360/20 was a lobotomized 'sorta' 360/.)
Noel
CHM was able to obtain volumes 18-20 of the IBM 2050 drawings, which are
the microcode charts and ROS dump. I got them scanned and uploaded yesterday
to http://bitsavers.org/pdf/ibm/360/fe/2050
This was one of the things that I had been trying to locate for a while now.
PDP11GUI is at v1.46 now.
Among others I fixed an annoying bug, which prevented proper terminal
output when running certain diagnostic paper tapes:
Filling <NUL> chars were sometimes interpreted as backspace!
Load from http://retrocmp.com/tools/pdp11gui
As ever, any feedback is welcome,
Joerg
> From: tony duell
>> I have a Plessey PM-D11/SPC-1 backplane here
> How many slots? I assume it's hex height. What (if anything) are the
> power input connectors?
9; yes; it has the standard 9-pin connector as used on the 11/05-10, and the
early /40s and /45s. (FWLIW, the documentation for the PM-F11 says that _it_
comes with either the same 9-pin connector power harness, or the harness with
the newer 15-/6-pin connector pair, and gives part numbers for each.)
The harness of this one is subtly different, though - instead of all fast-on
tabs at the backplane end, there is a DuPont header on the backplane (looks
like 10 pin), and a bunch of the pins on the large 9-pin connector are
connected to that (not just ACLO and DCLO, but e.g. there are a pair which
are connected to +5V, and another pair to ground (the latter two also go to
fast-on tabs).
> Is there any reason to assume it's not a clone of a standard DEC
> backplane ... the 'SPC' part of the name suggests a Unibus peripheral
> backplane
Oh, I'm sure it's _some_ form of SPC backplane - it has the NPG jumpers from
CA1 to CB1 on all 9 slots, for instance. And it has a bunch of wires running
>from 1A/B down to the CDEF part, and then back from CDEF to 9A/B. And the NPG
is routed from 1A down to CA1/CA2, and then back up to 9A.
But I'm trying to figure out exactly what sort of SPC backplane it is. E.g.
it looks like slots 2-8 _might_ be MUD (the signals from 1A/B are bussed
across all those slots on A/B, over to 9A/B). But without documentation, or
a lot of ohm-meter work...
Noel
Hi, all, I have a Plessey PM-D11/SPC-1 backplane here, and I'm interested in
finding some documentation for it. I looked online, but couldn't find
anything?
This site:
http://www.compsy.de/gebr-vax/repman_verl.htm
seems to list one, and does apparently 'rent' documentation, but I'm not sure
they're ready to rent something to someone on another continent. (If someone
in Europe can assist in dealing with them, I'd be extremely grateful.)
I do have a manual for the vaguely similar PM-F11/SPC backplane (which I would
be happy to scan promptly if anyone has a need for it; otherwise, it will get
scanned when I obtain a round tuit), and that, plus an ohmmeter, would
probably allow me to eventually figure out the PM-D11, but I figured I'd look
and see if I could save all that work, and put it into something else... :-)
Noel
On Fri, May 8, 2015 at 5:43 AM, Johnny Billquist <bqt at update.uu.se> wrote:
>> The Z-machine for RT-11 that Infocom released only handled v3 images.
>
> I only knew of the V1 version, for the original Zork I. I never knew that
> Infocom released anything past Zork I for RT-11.
I can't seem to find the definitive catalog, but I know there were
folio packaging of several of the titles available for sale. I saw
Starcross hanging on the wall at the Digital Store in Columbus, OH
(back when there _was_ a brick-and-mortar store), and I am reasonable
certain there were others, definitely more than just the V1 Zork.
>> You can run a v3 game comfortably in 48K bytes...
>> As for the PDP-11, one _could_ write a split-I&D interpreter for
>> larger games...
>
> Um? Where have you been? ZEMU have been around for about 15 years now. It
> runs all V1 to V8 games, and runs under both RT-11 and RSX.
I think I forgot ZEMU has support past V5. My apologies.
> On MIM:: (once more)
> .zem/li/sy
> -- System games --
> Game Release Serial Inform Z-Machine
> ADVENT 5 961209 6.05 5
> ZDUNGEON 13 040826 6.14 5
:-)
> ZTREK 1 000229 6.21 5
Ooh... that's right... there's an implentation of Star Trek on the
Z-machine. I'll have to go grab that to see which version it's based
on. Personally, I'm used to the one that was in Dave Ahl's "101
Computer Games", the one that has the short range scan that represents
each item with up to three chars and empty locations with all spaces
(as opposed to a simple grid with 1 char per filled spot and, ISTR, a
'.' for empty locations).
When I get the opportunity (later this weekend I think) I will check
my backups for the RSTS/E mod I was mentioning. If the RT-11 ZEMU
doesn't compile on RSTS/E as is, it should be a 1-line mod.
-ethan
Anyone got any RT11/RSTS-E games? I'm back on with my project to recreate
the PDP-11 that I goofed around with when I was a kid. (Its accessible via
the bbs... bbs.cortex-media.info 4223)
I have 2.52 version of Dungeon, and a version of Star Trek. Anyone got
anything else?
I'm still looking for Oregon Software Pascal as well...
Thanks!
Mark
> From: Jon Elson
> Well, first, rotary converters draw a LOT of imaginary power (in other
> words, they have an awful power factor) and so the line current can
> become MUCH higher than you would expect.
> ...
> We tried to rig up a phase converter scheme to run the motor-generator
> set on a 370/145 in a guy's house, and it did NOT go well. he only had
> a 60 A 240 V service, and the imaginary current was over 60 A!
Had to Google 'imaginary power'... Not a lot of experience with high-power AC
stuff! :-) ('Imaginary power' is probably not the best term to use, because
there are actual currents involved; I like the 'reactive power' name better.)
The article I read said that in reactive load which is high in inductance
(which is, I assume, the source of the high reactive load in rotary
convertors - or am I confused - a common happening, I concede :-), judicious
application of capacitance can reduce the reactive load. Why isn't this used
with rotary convertors to reduce their reactive load?
Any idea what the active and reactive powers/currents were in that attempted
installation?
Noel