All,
I'm in search of either an XYlogics 472 in the Sun Multibus to VME adapter, or just a Multibus to VME adapter (can get the bare XYlogics boards). I'd prefer the Sun 501-1155 assembly since it has the right back panel connectors, but either way is better than neither way :)
Thanks,
Jonathan
I have an old german PLC on the desk that I need to repair,
it is an Eberle PLS511, build out of a 1Bit CPU build out of 4xxx CMOS
Logic.
I do have two slightly different units, one is equipped with 3 pcs
66S018 Eproms from Intersilm DC is 8319.
I'm unable to find a datasheet for that device but I thin it is
compatible to the old Intersil IM6653 1024x4 Bit Eprom to build the
wordlength of 12 Bits out of 3 Roms..
There is a different memory Card equipped with 2 27C04, the jumpers are
configured for a 2K Rom type..and it seems that the 27C064 ar only
installed because of the CMOS Power consumption..
Can someone plase confirm that the 6653 is compatible to the 66S018
which may be a military variant?
Is there a datasheet perferably including the description of the
programming algorithm?
Thanks in Advance,
Holm
--
Technik Service u. Handel Tiffe, www.tsht.de, Holm Tiffe,
Goethestrasse 15, 09569 Oederan, USt-Id: DE253710583
info at tsht.de Fax +49 37292 709779 Tel +49 37292 709778 Mobil: 0172 8790 741
On Sun, 17 Oct 2021 14:52:33 -0400
Jesse Dougherty via cctalk <cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
> I have A series servers, parts, interface cards, and probably any
> accessory that you might need. If anyone is looking for any HP 1000 A
> series hardware, let me know. I still have a few of these loaded A990
> boxes that I can do $1,700.00 each
>
> www.ebay.com/itm/384211227987
As a satisfied customer, I can vouch for Jesse's offer. I bought one of these
systems over a year ago and it has performed flawlessly ever since. I've used
it with multiple SCSI disks and GPIB disks (including HPDrive).
Cheers,
Lyle
--
73 NM6Y
Bickley Consulting West
https://bickleywest.com
"Black holes are where God is dividing by zero"
Does anyone have information on a SMC*11E controller? Appears to be a two-drive SMD controller for Unibus (hex height module). Looking the connectors over, it looks like it'd probably drop into a MUD slot and use the SPC pins.
Thanks,
Jonathan
I have A series servers, parts, interface cards, and probably any
accessory that you might need. If anyone is looking for any HP 1000 A
series hardware, let me know. I still have a few of these loaded A990
boxes that I can do $1,700.00 each
www.ebay.com/itm/384211227987
Thanks
Jesse
Cypress Technology Inc
Jesse at Cypress-tech.com
http://www.bitsavers.org/bits/IBM/Displaywriter/SSSD_20210926/MSDOS.IMD
I have a copy of the disk this image was made from booted on my DW, and am
trying to load easywriter or a little basrun compatible basic program onto
an 8" disk with my greaseweazle.
Not having much luck with the HxC software or winimage poking at that
image, or loading what I would think would be compatible DOS disks on the
DW.
Does anyone have some pointers on tools to help me read this image, and
make new images and add files?
Thanks,
-Eric
Hey all,
Someone in one of the Facebook vintage groups that I'm in just picked up a
Computhink Eagle 32, an early-ish (appears to be circa 1981/82) 68000-based
machine with integral display and keyboard.
On the rear it has a 50-pin connection for floppy and a 34-pin connection
for a hard disk, but they have no external peripherals for it, and also no
software and documentation. It's quite possible that the floppy connection
is simply Shugart; hard disk *maybe* SASI I suppose, skimping on the number
of ground lines (in which case it likely ran an external bridge to ST412/506).
Online searching shows up very little about this system; does anyone here
happen to have one or know anything about them? This one seems to have a
pair of 256KB memory boards fitted, but also (perhaps worryingly) an empty
"video" slot - although CRT connections apparently route to the main system
board, so there's a chance that there was just a video expansion option not
fitted to this particular machine. Still, even if that's not an issue,
without knowledge of drives and software it might forever remain in boat
anchor territory...
cheers,
Jules
Does anyone have it? It supposedly came with TSX-Plus, which I grabbed
>from the classiccmp site, here, but it seems missing from this distro.
thx
jake
Due to family medical issues I have to downsize and move into a retirement facility at the end of this month. The following are available for local pick up only in the Boston MA metro west region. I can be reached off-list at john at forecast.name.
DEC VT180 with 4 floppy drives
Includes HSC Inc?s CO16 8086 coprocessor with 256KB memory
Full hardware documentation for the CO16
Documentation:
Bios User?s Guide
CP/M Operating System Manual
Multiplan Manuals
Microsoft M80/L80 Manua
MBasic VT180 v5.21 Reference manual
No software available. If/When I find the software I will make it available to whoever
takes this system.
Digital Research CP/M Plus distribution (includes 8? floppies)
Acorn RISC OS 3 Programmers Reference Manuals
Volumes 1 - 5 + Style Guide
(This does not appear to be available on Bitsavers)
Apple Inside Macintosh
Volumes 1 - 6
Quicktime components
Communications toolbox
Apple Resedit reference
Minix Software
Minix 1.5 for Macintosh (including disks)
Minix for the Atari ST
Minix Binaries and Sources for IBM PC/AT (5?? floppies)
Miscellaneous Macintosh Software (Pre MacOS)
At Ease
Kid Pix
Kid Pix Companion
SimEarth
Sim City
Sim Town
Sim City 2000
Sim City 2000 Scenarios - Vol 1 Great Disasters
Sim City Urban Renewal Kit
Microsoft Flight Simulator
Disk Doubler
Auto Doubler
Virtual
Hard Disk Toolkit
Reader Rabbit
Metrowerks CodeWarrior Bronze
Think C Version 5
Think Reference
Miscellaneous Macintosh Books (Pre MacOS)
The Apple Macintosh Book by Cary Lu
Hypercard Developers Guide
Miscellaneous Atari ST Software
Balance Of Power
Omnires Monitor
PC Ditto
Miscellaneous Atari ST Books
Atari ST Internals
Programmer?s Reference Guide
Other:
Atari 400/800 Disk Operating System Reference Manual
Atari 810 Disk Drive Operators Manual
Hello,
Is there a list of codewords for old HP-UX media anywhere? I'm messing
with HP-UX 10.20 and OnlineJFS seems to be present on the first
application CD but is locked behind a codeword, which I can't seem to
find anywhere. I have the December '01 application disks handy but no
codewords.
Thanks.
All,
I've got an Asante Mini EN/SC with PowerBook cable that I'd like to trade for the full-size EN/SC. Turns out you need the special cable even if you're using regular SCSI, and I don't have that one (stacking DB25 on one end, DB25M on the other). I've tested the Mini EN/SC with TangentDelta's PowerBook 180 and it works fine there, so it's definitely just a cabling issue.
I'd like to trade it for a full-size EN/SC, or alternately buy an EN/SC as I may have someone interested in buying the Mini EN/SC for their PowerBook.
Thanks,
Jonathan
All,
I recently picked up an ICE-85 in-circuit emulator from Jack Rubin (thanks Ian and Connor for ferrying it back!). I thought that the stuff it came with included a Prompt-80 as a controller, but it does not: there's an unrelated Prompt-48 board in the boxes. The ICE-85 came with ISIS control software on 8" diskette. So I guess I'm in the market for an Intel MDS-800. Good luck, right? :P
Thanks,
Jonathan
On Tue, 12 Oct 2021 cctalk-request at classiccmp.org wrote:
> Nobody wants to be confused with me.
:)
> Became "Grumpy Ol' Fred" when in an email list with multiple "Fred"s, in
> order to spare the other "Fred"s from bing confused with me.
>
> Now, howzbout a short, quick introduction?
Since you asked, sure ... why not?
Started with tech professionally around 26 years ago, was always
fascinated by it. Started out when DOS and Novell were all the rage.
Worked for a local MSP that mostly serviced banks.
Bounced here and there and was exposed to all sorts of stuff. Printers,
IBM Mainframes running VSE and I think CICS (it was a long time ago),
wireless, networks, and whole host of things in between.
Gained a lot of VMS experience (other than just being a user) by working
for a local financial institution. Had a rather good relationship with
the data processor and that's how I ended up getting my first Alphaserver
and VAX.
Went back to the MSP life for awhile, owners retired, new company that
bought them, no way else to put it - sucked. Worked for a local
manufacturing company for the past 5 years, thought I'd retire from there,
but due to a bad combination of their (lack of) response to covid and
continually resisting getting off a 15 year old (5 years out of support)
ERP system, it was time to go. Time is worth more than money.
Work part time now for a local non-profit as the tech guy. I have more
time on my hands now for home tech projects. Some days I work from home,
which is nice. I've got an iSeries, an Apple //e, and a Commodore 64 that
are all begging to be worked on and resurrected. ... and other stuff too.
Ooops. This is probably not as short as you wanted.
Fred
Cleaning out my parents' house I found a Pro/350 motherboard spare new
in box. I'd use it here, except for the fact that:
It's a spares so it doesn't have chips. Not a biggie as I have plenty of
11/23 CPUs but the FPU was in some sort of carrier so I don't have that.
It doesn't have the boot ROMs
Most important, the Pro/350 didn't have video on board. I don't have the
video cards for a 350, so I can't just swap it into one of my 380's and
expect anything to work other than the serial port.
Let me know.
C
On Thu, 7 Oct 2021 cctalk-request at classiccmp.org wrote:
> Message: 4
> Date: Wed, 6 Oct 2021 22:42:22 +0200
> From: Liam Proven <lproven at gmail.com>
> Subject: Re: cctalk Digest, Vol 85, Issue 3
>
> Miser at miser.net? Still sounds pretty grumpy, though...
Nah, not grumpy. Just cheap and/or frugal. ;)
I also do not claim to the be the other (Grumpy) Fred.
"Asking for a friend"...
Anyone have a spare MK11 box controller? At LSSM, we're bringing up an
11/70 and we need a box controller for the new memory.
If not, we'll get by, but just in case someone has one propping a door
open...
I have a 150cc scooter with a LiteOn MC21 fuel injection ECU that is
malfunctioning. My search for a replacement brain has been unsuccessful.
LiteOn became Delphi which is now part of Borg Warner and I don't see
anything for download (or even purchase).
All I've been able to find online is the "Delphi Small Engine Management
System Service Manual" from 2008, which refers to an apparently
Windows-based program referred to only as "DIAG TOOL". It can display
running engine parameters and malfunction codes, although it does not
appear to be capable of reflashing the ECU.
I'm waiting for a connector kit to come from Amazon (probably via China)
so I can rig it up on the bench with simulated inputs. The unit is
potted in silicone rubber which will be a PITA to remove. I found this
Ukranian site where a member had the fuel injector driver transistor
fail (in his case, shorted) -
http://geon-club.com.ua/forum/viewtopic.php?f=35&t=5735
<http://geon-club.com.ua/forum/viewtopic.php?f=35&t=5735>
If that's my problem it's failed open, but I'm not going to mutilate the
box until I get it powered up on the bench...
Any help with anything relating to the MC21 EFI would be greatly
appreciated. Thanks!
I have another odd preliminary document: Guide to writing a P/OS I/O
Driver and advanced programming notes. Order AA-BT73A-TH
Is there a copy on the net somewhere, or is this another unique oddball
I should scan?
C
> Date: Sat, 2 Oct 2021 19:54:02 -0700
> From: "Ali" <cctalk at ibm51xx.net>
> Procomm was the first terminal program I used that was easy to
> understand and work with. Of course I was using it mainly to dial BBSes
I also started with ProComm Plus for DOS. Just like WordPerfect of the
time (5.x) I sure had all of those key sequences memorized....
I think I still have a copy on my old DOS workstation that I used to use.
Need to fire that up this winter.
> With windows I actually started using ZOC which seemed to run better and
Thank you for this tip. I had an old IBM NetVista all-in-one workstation
that I wanted to resurrect, finally did so within the last month (running
eComStation!) , and of course needed a way to connect to other things on
the network here. A terminal emulator is a must. :)
Installed ZOC, and now replying to this message connected to my Alpha in
the house. (the NetVista workstation is in the back garage....because who
doesn't need a workstation in the garage just in case?)
Now I need to see if I can find a halfway usable web browser...
Fred
Hi all,
you're invited to the Update computer club[0] public lecture series
"Updateringar"[1]!
When: 2021-10-09, 18:00 CEST (Note: one hour earlier than usual!)
Stream: https://streaming.media.ccc.de/vcfb2021/
Q&A: https://bbb.vcfb.de/b/ank-eka-1zw-rkc
Update Computer Club: History and Not-So-Certain Future
At Swedish universities, students organize in clubs for spare time
activities like photography, sports, music and also computers! Update is
the student computer club loosely connected to Uppsala University. We
started out in 1983 around what was then new shiny computers and have
evolved into a caretaker of the old and precious. We have kept the very
DECSYSTEM 2060 around which the club was formed as well as a VAX 8650,
PDP-12, a running PDP-11/70 and many other things. The club is creeping
up on its 40th birthday and we would like to present a retrospective
with anecdotes and trivia. The future is uncertain as the university
department paying for our rooms is moving and will no longer be able to
accomodate Update. What will the next chapter for this old club be? And
how can you help us?
Pontus Pihlgren (Update)
The lecture is free and open to everyone.
Note: This talk is a contribution to the Vintage Computing Festival
Berlin 2021 and therefore happens one hour earlier than our usual time.
The link for participation is also different.
Click here to watch the lecture stream:
https://streaming.media.ccc.de/vcfb2021/
Click here to ask a question or discuss afterwards (no sign-up needed):
https://bbb.vcfb.de/b/ank-eka-1zw-rkc
See also our online exhibition[2] at the event.
Don't want to miss upcoming events? Subscribe to our low-traffic
announcement list by sending a mail with the body "subscribe announce"
to majordomo at update.uu.se!
Hope to see you there,
Anke
[0] https://www.update.uu.se/index_eng.html
[1] https://www.update.uu.se/wiki/doku.php/projekt:updateringar
[2] https://wiki.vcfb.de/2021/en:ausstellungen#the_swedish_educational_computer…
> *Neat*! I was thinking of trying to lay this down on a real 11/23+ here
> at the house, then realized I didn't have two RD51's. Can it gen on an
> RD53 by chance, I could upload one of those to a disk in a weekend or
> immediately with the Dave Gesswin emulator (which I need to return but
> we're just about to pull out those big Perqs)
Chris,
I doubt you'll be able to use anything other than a RD51 drive - as
this ancient V7M doesn't yet support newer drive types. You might
be able to put some of the system files on an RL02 - but I haven't confirmed
there's a RL02 boot loader on this kit.
Back in 1983 the PDP-11/23-PLUS was a relatively *new* machine. There's
later versions of Ultrix-11 (V2 and later) that added support for the 11/73
and bigger drives - look on the Unix Heritage Society site under Unix
Archive. There's a downloadable installation tape for Ultrix-11 there.
https://www.tuhs.org
Tony
--
Tony Nicholson <tony.nicholson at computer.org>
I am hoping someone here knows Richard Cornwell, driving force behind
KL10B SimH and associated forks.
Not sure how to raise the issue of simulated RP07 drives size not
matching RPO7 and looking like RPO6.
Also trying to figure out how to set switches as in other KA/KL sims.
I can't seem to find a means of doing that in RC's KL.
Is there a usage template? I have found the docs that describe it and
tte config but the questions above are not evident in my reading, does
not mean the data is not there, just I have not found the clue path.
thanks for any help or pointers!
bad bob
I found files for my favorite DOS editor on an archive from my OS/2
machine, which replaced my DOS machine in about 1990.
The editor was ETOOL, from Amerisoft.
If anybody wants the files, I'm happy to send them.
-rw-r--r-- 1 vsnyder staff 245248 Mar 8 1988 e/dos/etool.exe
-rw-r--r-- 1 vsnyder staff 1024 Mar 8 1988 e/dos/etool.fig
-rw-r--r-- 1 vsnyder staff 83968 Jul 9 1985 e/dos/etool.hlp
I lost the manual decades ago.
Van Snyder
van.snyder at sbcglobal.net
Recently Al Kossow made available a zip file containing a Micro/PDP-11
installation kit for Unix V7M-11 V1.0 on bitsavers as RX50 disk images.
Tinkering away here in Covid lockdown, I've managed to get this running
under SIMH pdp11 emulating an almost historically accurate PDP-11/23 plus.
I've placed the SIMH initialisation file, a couple of RD51 disk images and
an "installation recipe" for making these disks on GitHub at -
https://github.com/agn453/V7M-11
While I mainly had exposure to later versions of Unix and Ultrix-11 on
a PDP-11/70 as an undergraduate - this one surely brings back memories!
Tony
--
Tony Nicholson <tony.nicholson at computer.org>
I use both Realterm and Tera Term.
Realterm does not emulate terminals - but is able to display ALL the ASCII
characters including the Control Characters and even 8-bit characters.
This has been invaluable to me working with my late 1970's Tektronix 4052
and 4054A computers, which made heavy use of ten of the ASCII control
characters for quick formatting of BASIC PRINT commands without requiring
multiple PRINT commands. Realterm also can capture the entire stream of
ASCII characters to a file - which is invaluable in capturing all the
characters from DC300 Tektronix program tape cartridges. I use the
XON/XOFF feature with both my 4052 and 4054A to send and receive ASCII
programs to the Tektronix computers at 9600 baud.
Here is an example output of Realterm with printed control characters - as
I am debugging my Arduino program to emulate the Tektronix 4924 GPIB tape
drive:
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/projects/tektronix-4924-tape-drive-emulator/m…
I also use Tera Term - as it is able to emulate Tektronix graphics
terminals, both the 4012/4014 vector graphics AND the 'newer' 4100 series
color graphics terminals! My Tektronix 4041 GPIB controller computers
(68000 based) had only a single line LED display, but supported Tektronix
4012/4014 if you had the optional Graphics ROM. I was able to port several
of my 4050 graphics games to 4041 BASIC (Artillery, Lunar Lander, and my
port of Adventure) using Tera Term on my Windows 10 PC as the terminal to
display the graphics/text and for data input. I also recovered the 4041
EZ-TEST (GPIB interactive program development) tapes, which only supported
the 4100 color terminals - and used Tera Term successfully to emulate those
color terminals. Tera Term also supports XON/XOFF and file
capture/restore, so I have been able to use it with my 4041 computer to
replace the internal DC100 tape drive and load and restore programs from my
Windows 10 PC.
See example Tera Term vector graphics screenshots and color terminal
screenshots in my 4041 thread on vcfed.org:
https://www.vcfed.org/forum/forum/genres/other/76507-tektronix-4041-compute…
Monty
> Date: Fri, 1 Oct 2021 19:57:19 -0700
> From: Curious Marc <curiousmarc3 at gmail.com>
> To: lee_courtney at acm.org, Lee Courtney <leec2124 at gmail.com>, "General
> Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts" <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
> Subject: Re: Terminal Emulator
> Message-ID: <50E6AD1D-F0D5-42CB-93A8-163B9945BB48 at gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
>
> I use Teraterm too. Works both on Windoze and Mac. I like the ability to
> run scripts.
> Marc
>
> > On Sep 30, 2021, at 5:51 PM, Lee Courtney via cctalk <
> cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
> >
> > ?We use Teraterm at work - adequate, free, open-source(if that's
> important),
> > meets our needs for embedded development across a wide variety of
> > platforms.
> >
> > YMMV,
> >
> > Lee Courtney
> >
> >> On Thu, Sep 30, 2021 at 11:57 AM Mike Katz via cctalk <
> cctalk at classiccmp.org>
> >> wrote:
> >>
> >> I am looking for a good terminal emulator. Not for connecting to older
> >> computers serially but to connect with my embedded designs.
> >> Do any of you have any recommendations.
> >>
> >> I've been using Realterm for years but it's not very good.
> >>
> >> I used UCON, hyper term, terra term, telix (going way back) and a few I
> >> can't remember the name of.
> >>
> >> Here are my needs:
> >>
> >> 1. Runs under Windows 10 (linux optionally)
> >> 2. Has user selectable baud rates (I use 500K baud frequently)
> >> 3. Can use any Windows Com Port.
> >> 4. Can send files as raw binary
> >> 5. Has X-modem built in (nice but optional)
> >> 6. Has some kind of basic VT-100 support
> >> 7. Can display both ascii characters and binary data has hex numbers,
> >> preferably on alternate lines (hex above the ascii character like this:
> >> 45 76 65 72 79
> >> E V E R Y
> >> 8. Can send short manually entered strings in hex or ascii.
> >> 9. Can recognize protocols (based on start and/or end of text
> characters)
> >> 10. Costs less than $100
> >> 11. Can Capture what comes in the port
> >> 12. Has local echo (when connected to systems that don't echo what you
> >> type)
> >> 13. Has a large scroll back buffer.
> >> 14. Has programmable macro buttons or function keys.
> >> 15. Can handle removal and insertion of the TTL to Serial USB converter
> >> without crashing.
> >>
> >> Thank you
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >
> > --
> > Lee Courtney
> > +1-650-704-3934 cell
>
I'm trying to list out the document scans I have and work out which are
already on bitsavers and which are not (and, indeed, a fair few of these
are originally from bitsavers anyway). This is probably several thousand
files total, so searching manx by hand is not an option!
I see that manx lists the MD5 checksum for many files, at least it does
for those from bitsavers. Is there a publicly available list of URL and
MD5 checksum? This would make it relatively easy for me to cross check
my files against the list and whittle down to a subset that I should
make available.
Alternatively, is the current manx database available anywhere? I know
the code is on github, but I didn't see the data there. (I do have an
SQL dump from 2010 when manx changed hands, but that's not recent enough
to save much).
I could try to do some parsing of bitsavers-filename => DEC-part-number
and eliminate files that way, but that seems inexact at best. Or I could
just download the DEC subset of files (spread across the mirrors) but
that seems a bit antisocial.
Antonio
--
Antonio Carlini
antonio at acarlini.com
Hi, All,
I'm fiddling with my 11/725 and as part of that, I'm prepping possible
system images to deploy using the 10-year-old 11/730 emulator that's
now part of SIMH. I'm trying to get the original (v3.8) version
working because of the numerous changes to how simh 4.0 works now.
I'm working from the sources on http://www.9track.net/simh/vax730/
They compiled just fine and the binary runs (on Linux, FWIW) but I've
tried booting several different TU58 images and VMS device images and
so far, they all tell me "file open error".
Here's the current config with me trying to run the CRD tape/disk
combo (trimmed just show mounted images on TD0 and RB1).
sim> show conf
VAX730 simulator configuration
CPU, idle disabled, 2048KB, HALT to SIMH
.
.
.
TD, 2 units
TD0, 262KB, attached to BE-T176I-DE.tu58, write enabled
TD1, 262KB, not attached, write enabled
.
.
.
RB, address=FFFB86-FFFB87, vector=2A8, 4 units
RB0, 64MW, not attached, write enabled, RB80
RB1, 5242KW, attached to CRDPACK-RL02.img, write enabled, RB02
RB2, 5242KW, not attached, write enabled, RB02
RB3, 5242KW, not attached, write enabled, RB02
If I have to, I can grab the source for the current version off of
github, but having looked it over, it's essentially this same emulator
(with commit dates of 9-10 years ago) plus some recent structural
cleanup that's similar across all emulators. The functional parts are
this same emulator.
Thanks for any tips.
-ethan
I?ve got a DEC 3000/300 system that has some SCSI drives with aging bearings installed. I?d like to be able to start to migrate some of my systems, like this, to flash media, of some kind, as even my large repository of SCSI disks is starting to dry up.
Here is my SRM level info:
DEC 3000 - M300
Digital Equipment Corporation
VPP PAL V5.56-80800101/OSF PAL V1.45-80800201 - Built on 30-SEP-1996 09:18:31.84
As far as I have read, the SCSI2SD v6 2020 should be compatible with several varieties of DEC hardware, from the VAXen to the Alphas. However, I can?t seem to get anywhere useful with mine. I have the virtual disks configured as follows:
>>> sh dev
BOOTDEV ADDR DEVTYPE NUMBYTES RM/FX WP DEVNAM REV
------- ---- ------- -------- ----- -- ------ ---
ESA0 08-00-2B-3F-4C-9A , TENBT
DKA100 A/1/0 DISK 9.54GB FX RZ40 6.0
DKA300 A/3/0 DISK 9.54GB FX RZ40 6.0
DKA400 A/4/0 RODISK 305.01MB RM WP RRD45 6.0
All three disks are from the SCSI2SD. I have attempted to make the inquiry strings match the originals, as closely as possible. In the SCSI2SD utility, I have the following config:
General page: all defaults, termination off (I have tried parity, scsi2 mode, and setting SCSI speed to sync, with no improvement)
Device 1: enabled, ID 1, device Hard Drive, start sector 0, sector size 512, sector count 18636800, vendor ?DEC ", product ?RZ40 ?, revision ? 6.0?, serial number <random string>
Device 2: enabled, ID 3, device Hard Drive, start sector 18636800, sector size 512, sector count 18636800, vendor ?DEC ", product ?RZ40 ?, revision ? 6.0?, serial number <random string + 1>
Device 3: enabled, ID 4, device CDROM, start sector 37273600, sector size 2048, sector count 148933, vendor ?DEC ", product ?RRD45 ?, revision ? 6.0?, serial number <random string + 2>
I?ve also tried booting from a virtual CDROM, only, with no luck there, either. In all cases, I get the following from SRM:
>>> test scsi
T-STS-SCSI A - Data Trans test
? T-ERR-SCSI A - Data Trans test - nondma/sync inq size miscompare
T-ERR-SCSI A - id = 1 lun = 0
? T-ERR-SCSI A - Data Trans test - nondma/sync inq size miscompare
T-ERR-SCSI A - id = 3 lun = 0
? T-ERR-SCSI A - Data Trans test - nondma/sync inq size miscompare
T-ERR-SCSI A - id = 4 lun = 0
?? 002 SCSI 0x0008
84 FAIL
Does anyone have an idea what might be causing this? Has anyone tried a v6 SCSI2SD in a DEC 3000?
Thanks!
- Alex
Hey all --
I have a TC08 DECtape controller that I'd like to convert to a TC08N (the
negibus version of the TC08). If I'm reading the documentation right, this
involves swapping in a few flip chips -- M100 for the installed M101, M102
for M103, and M633 for M623.
If anyone has any of these, please drop me a line. Curious also if anyone
out there has done this conversion and can comment on whether my assessment
is correct...
Thanks!
- Josh
Got a small batch (8) of Victor 9000 floppies, MSDOS ca. 1985. I
really don't want to write a decoder for such a small batch--I've got
other things on the burner right now. Anyone want to take a crack at
transferring the data? (Funds available).
--Chuck
I've been restoring a PDP-11/05 recently and after replacing several
faulty ICs I have it mostly working. I've run into a bit of a problem
whilst running MAINDEC-11-D0NB (T14 TRAP TEST) though.
The failing instruction sequence is:
7200:?? MOV #6340,R0
7204:?? MOV R0,(R0)+
7206:?? CMP 6340,#6342
7214:?? BEQ 7220
7216:?? HALT
This halts at 7216 with:
? R0 = 6342
? 6340 = 6340
I tried this same set of instructions on a PDP-11/84 and also on Simh
and the result is:
? R0 = 6342
? 6340 = 6342
which is what the diagnostic seems to expect.
I've carefully looked through the PDP-11/05 microprogram listing but I'm
having difficulty seeing where this is going wrong. Here is a brief
extract of the microprogram in the context of the MOV R0,(R0)+
instruction along with my interpretation of what I think is going on:
LOC? NXT? * SOURCE MODE 0 (REGISTER), GET SOURCE DATA
201? 007? S0-1? B=R[S]; BUT BYTE
007? 001? S0-2? R[10]=B; BUT DESTINATION
????????? / IF IR<5:3> = 2 GOTO D2-1
? B = R0 = 6340??? // B = source register
? R10 = B = 6340?? // Source data stored in sratch pad register R10
LOC? NXT? * DEST MODE 2 (AUTO-INC) GET DEST DATA, OP AND REPLACE
105? 331? D2-1? BA=R[D]; DATAIP; ALBYT
331? 341? D2-2? B=R[D]+1+BYTE.BAR
341? 200? D2-3? R[D]=B; BUT JSRMP; GOTO D1-2; CKOFF
????????? / IF INST NOT JMP OR JSR FALL THROUGH TO D1-2
? BA = R0 = 6340??? // Bus address = destination register
? B = R0 + 2 = 6342 // Auto-increment and store in B
? R0 = B = 6342???? // Update destination register
LOC? NXT? * DEST MODE 1 (REG,DEFERRED) GET DEST DATA, OP AND REPLACE
200? 210? D1-2? B=UNIBUS DATA; BUT BYTE
210? 143? D1-3? R[11]=B; BUT UNARY
163? 334? D1-4? B=R[10] OP B; BUT NOMOD
334? 065? D1-5? DATO; ALBYT; CKOFF
065? 305? D1-5? DRIVERS=B; GOTO S2-2 (BUT SERVICE)
? B = (6340) = 0??? // B = value at location pointed to by bus address
? R11 = B = 0?????? // R11 is only used for unary instructions
? B = R10 = 6340??? // B = source data stored previously in R10
? (6340) = B = 6340 // B is written to the address pointed to by bus address
Where have I gone wrong with this? I can't see from the above how the
value at 6340 can possibly be 6342
Matt
Hey all,
According to
http://bitsavers.trailing-edge.com/pdf/hp/9000_200/9000-200_periphSupp_Dec8…
(see PDF page 2), it seems as if HP-UX 5.1 should work on the 9000/217.
http://hparchive.com/Catalogs/HP-Catalog-1986.pdf also seems to confirm
this (PDF page 71 under Series 200 Bundled Systems, it's mentioned that
the Model 217 can run single-user HP-UX). However, there seems to be
conflicted information based on people that I've talked to and the
hpmuseum page with a copy of HP-UX 5.1 whether it should work at all,
whether 5.1 is a unified release where the boot floppy should work on
both series 200 and 300, or whether there's another boot floppy for
series 200 which apparently has not been archived.
I recently obtained a Model 217 and would like to know if anyone has
more info on this, the two people that I know of that have tried it get
a hang on boot.
Thanks,
Larkin
Nostalgia is great for aging baby-boomers as me. Back in 1978 I along
with a friend bought a Heathkit H1 and spent many leisure hours
constructing it and getting it to boot up! By 1984 I moved on to the Coleco
ADAM and learned BASIC(Well more accurately APPLE Basic) spending too much
time on it rather than on my PhD studies. Trying to write my dissertation
using Writer was a challenge as was getting it to print on the included
daisy-wheel printer ? all that clacking. Noise! Noise! as the Grinch says. But
I did get my doctorate but had to go to S. Korea and Univ. of
Education(TESOL program) to use it.
Microsoft?s monopoly began in the earliest days of microcomputing. Read
Gate?s letter to programmers /hobbyists to see how a monopolist thinks.
Linux has come along and poked Microsoft in the eye but hasn?t done too
much damage according to this writer. As written here a nostalgia for the
early years may be what we classic computer-philes find so compelling in
cctalk. And to be honest I?ll move to WIN 11 because the choice(s) are
somewhat limited.
Happy computing.
Murray ?
I found this interesting for perspective. The British media (and
AFAICS of Australia, New Zealand and several bits of Europe) have been
saturated with coverage of a much-loved, widely-celebrated and revered
hero of tech.
As FC points out, even the American _tech_ media barely noticed.
?
The prescient, quirky legacy of U.K. gadget inventor Clive Sinclair
Little known in the U.S., Sinclair democratized computing with his
dirt-cheap 1980s PCs. Even his many failures were decades ahead of
their time.
?
https://www.fastcompany.com/90680349/clive-sinclair-obituary
--
Liam Proven ? Profile: https://about.me/liamproven
Email: lproven at cix.co.uk ? gMail/gTalk/gHangouts: lproven at gmail.com
Twitter/Facebook/LinkedIn/Flickr: lproven ? Skype: liamproven
UK: +44 7939-087884 ? ?R (+ WhatsApp/Telegram/Signal): +420 702 829 053
While restoring and repairing a Data General Nova 2/10 I found a bad
bipolar PROM on the CPU board. The PROM has open-collector outputs and is
organized as 32 words by 8 bits. It appears that one of the open-collector
driver transistors is faulty (but it could also be that a fuse has
"healed").
The part is an Intersil IM5600CP, but these were also made by others, for
example Signetics and Philips made the 82S23 and TI and NTE made the faster
SN74S188N. Some vendors still sell these parts and there are even a few on
Ebay.
How do I program these PROMs? I found one somewhat obscure description of
the algorithm in the NTE datasheet, but I suspect that each manufacturer
had (somewhat) different algorithms.
Is there an affordable commercial programmer out there which can program
these PROMs?
Is there a simple design out there which I could breadboard for a one-off
programming job (maybe using an Arduino to control the programming
sequence)?
Thanks and best regards
Tom Hunter
I quite agree that one OS isn?t better than another. It is one?s personal
choice. However, it would be amiss of me not to acknowledge that some
people prefer one over another and will do so until someone proves
otherwise. My dear friend and I don?t let this situation get in the way of
our relationship though.
In the past I have run both WIN and Linux on my machine ? a dual-boot
situation I will not carry forward with WIN 11 ? and find Linux does some
things better than Windows particularly when I run an emulator(It is based
on a Coleco ADAM I?ve had since1984.)
Happy computing.
Murray ?
Dear List,
I am looking for older versions of MatLab (3.x, 4.x, and 5.x) for Unix
and (Open)VMS. I'm happy to pay a reasonable price for media kits, or,
alternatively, images of the installation media would suffice.
The media for Windows or Mac can be found on the various abandonware
sites, but I've had no luck finding MatLab for Unix / VMS so far.
Cheers
Malte
--
Malte Dehling
<mdehling at gmail.com>
Hi
Looking for a Sparcserver 1000/2000 to add to the sun collection. I?ve never seen one of these in the UK, but hopefully there might be one around. Happy to buy / pickup as I know they are heavy in the UK. Outside UK I might be able to arrange for collection.
Thanks.
I recently rescued two Microvax-2000s but both have dead RD53s.? Does anyone have a ROMable image of the Microvax 2000/Vaxstation 2000 boot-PROM patches from Wolfgang Moeller at?http://ftp.gwdg.de/pub/vms/pk2k/??? ?I'm looking to install NetBSD, not VMS and I don't have any VMS systems on which to run PATCH.? ?Microvax 2000 specs say it can sustain 3.3MB/s I/O, which has to be via the SCSI interface.? So a SCSI emulator should be significantly higher performance than an MFM drive (either 30+ year old drive, or emulator).
Web-searching shows a Sean O'Banion has burned the PROMs successfully; I haven't yet found other names.
If someone is willing to burn at least one set of EPROMs for me, I'd pay for the service (either ship EPROMS, or pay for them).
?
You might want to search the Github repositories of a certain "athornton"
looking for something called "yarr".
Obviously it would be wrong to use it. So don't.
Adam
On Fri, 2021-09-24 at 12:00 -0500, cctalk-request at classiccmp.org wrote:
> > supported by any release licensed by VSI, and they changed the
> > PRODUCER
> > key so you can't use those PAKs on DEC/CPQ/HP variants of VMS.
>
> Part of their licensing agreement with HPE which prohibits them from
> selling/licensing any previous version of OpenVMS that they haven't
> worked on.
>
> > HP stopped issuing new hobbyist PAKs back very early in 2020. I put
> > in
> > for a renew March or so and never got it. They were so
> > disinterested in
> > the program that they didn't mention stopping it, so I guess it
> > isn't
> > surprising that the page is still up.
>
> If it's a VAX PAK you need, contact me and I can send you a copy of
> the last VAX OpenVMS Hobbyist PAK sent out.? Note that it expires on
> 1-JAN-2022 so it's good only for a few more months.
Yeah, would have been nice if they would have handed it off to Montegar
again for VAX/early Alpha with the understanding that (a) it would be
the same restrictions that DEC/CPQ/HP had and (b) they weren't bugged
about it ever again. Sigh. Fits into the HP model of "buy and bury" I
guess. At least VAX has other options.
Anyone succeeded in patching the DCL security hole for VAX? I know it
wasn't officially fixed.
Hi all,
My PDP-11/73 has started misbehaving after several years of being very
stable. It is showing symptoms similar to when I've forgotten to enable
the LTC in the past, except this time, it is enable.
Power supply seems good - +5V, +12V, all seems there and appears to be
stable. I've probed the LTC going onto the backplane and I'm getting
50Hz. It looks a tad noisy, not sure if this is a problem. I will see if
I can get a picture of it, but it has very distinct rises and falls, so
hopefully that's ok. Looks to be about 50% duty cycle.
I've attempted several builds of the kernel, including the
out-of-the-box build from 2.11BSD distribution. I've also compiled a
shrunk down kernel without a bunch of devices I don't have, but it still
fails to work. I am using a SCSI2SD so it's easy for me to copy images
and test them in SIMH - they all boot fine in SIMH with a similar setup
(mscp, tmscp, 11/73, 1MB-ish RAM).
Does anyone have any ideas what might be causing this? I've run out of
ideas unfortunately. I'll stick a dump of the boot below, with debug
flag passed showing output from autoconfig.
I've also tried it without the tmscp card - just CPU, RAM and Emulex
UC07 in MSCP mode for scsi disk. I have tried it with less memory, and
I've tried removing the halt jumper from the 11/73 board (W5 if I
remember correctly)
Cheers,
Aaron
---------
^C
BOOT> DU 0
73Boot from ra(0,0,0) at 0172150
: ra(0,0,0)unix -D
Boot: bootdev=02400 bootcsr=0172150
2.11 BSD UNIX #116: Wed Dec 31 18:01:57 CST 1969
root at localhost.2bsd.com:/usr/src/sys/GENERIC
ra0: Ver 5 mod 13
ra0: RA81 size=1216601
phys mem = 1179648
avail mem = 959040
user mem = 307200
_hkprobe = 0
_hkattach = 143330
_hkVec = 0
hkintr = 120
_htprobe = 0
_htattach = 143550
_htVec = 0
htintr = 150
_raprobe = 0
_raattach = 34270
_raVec = 34200
raintr = 100
_rkprobe = 0
_rkattach = 144650
_rkVec = 0
rkintr = 130
_rlprobe = 0
_rlattach = 144770
_rlVec = 0
rlintr = 110
_tmprobe = 0
_tmattach = 143610
_tmVec = 0
tmintr = 160
_tmsprobe = 0
_tmsattach = 143740
_tmsVec = 143730
tmsintr = 200
_tsprobe = 0
_tsattach = 143660
_tsVec = 0
tsintr = 170
_xpprobe = 0
_xpattach = 0
_xpVec = 0
xpintr = 0
endvec = 1000
_conf_int = 16124
CGOOD = 14
CBAD = 24
_nextiv = 5500
trap = 4150
_version = 17400
KERN_NONSEP = 0
Grab 177440 = 36556hk ? csr 177440 vector 210 skipped: No CSR.
Grab 172440 = 36556ht ? csr 172440 vector 224 skipped: No CSR.
Grab 172150 = 0Grab 156 = 240Grab 154 = 100Stuff 14 @ 154
Stuff 340 @ 156
probe ra: return conf_int:Stuff 100 @ 154
Stuff 240 @ 156
ra ? csr 172150 vector 154 bad probe value 224.
Grab 177400 = 36556rk ? csr 177400 vector 220 skipped: No CSR.
Grab 174400 = 36556rl ? csr 174400 vector 160 skipped: No CSR.
Grab 172520 = 36556tm ? csr 172520 vector 224 skipped: No CSR.
Grab 174500 = 0Grab 262 = 0Grab 260 = 0tms ? csr 174500 vector 260 interrupt vector already in use.
Grab 172520 = 36556ts ? csr 172520 vector 224 skipped: No CSR.
xp ? csr 176700 vector 254 skipped: No autoconfig routines.
At this point it is stuck no matter how long I wait.
> From: Tony Duell <ard.p850ug1 at gmail.com>
> Were there 2 things called the KM11?
> The KM11 that I know is the maintenance unit
> From: Paul Birkel
> I think that we're all talking about the ML11-A, or at least are
> intending to ... although the Subject line has been erroneous from the
> get-go ...
Well, at least your brains are working, unlike mine! (Age starting to catch
up with me?) Yes, the ML11; I tried to correct the erroneous 'KL11' and
changed the wrong letter!
Noel
Hello,
The person that refered me to my present job at a datacenter passed away
this past monday. He was a hardware / software engineer for modcomp
computers. He left me all of the computers and documents. there are too
many books to keep, stuff concerning the modcomp computers that is not
saved anywhere else that i can tell.
I have picked up storage containers for all the books, and i can scan it
all. after that, its all probally going in the recycle bin, as i dont know
where or how i would keep such a large pile of paper manuals on hand.
what is the prefered format to upload things to bitsavers in? is pdf
acceptable?
How can i create a pdf that is not too big on file size? Can the text be
recognized and be made searchable within the scanned pdf?
any input would be appreciated, Thanks.
--Devin D.
> From: Mark Kahrs
There's a typo in your original Subject: line: the KL11 is a very early UNIBUS
(probably the very first UNIBUS device ever, looking at the board's Mxxx
number) asyn serial line interface:
https://gunkies.org/wiki/KL11_asynchronous_serial_line_interface
> manx tells me that these documents were known to exist:
> ..
> But they are not online.
I couldn't find out anything about the KM11 with a Web search, but I did see
that it's in the DEC PDP-11 fiche set. My set does have the KM11 Tech Manual.
I've never heard of the KM11, and as I said, there's nothing about it online.
Is it worth doing a CHWiki page for it? (With the fiche, it would be pretty
easy to whip up one covering the basics: functionality, component boards, etc.
> So I can't say whether they are 18 bit compatible.
Huh? The KM11 doesn't plug into the UNIBUS (or QBUS); it's a MASSBUS device (a
solid-state storage device, actually), so it plugs into an RH11 or RH70 or
something like that. (I should work with the VAX MASSBUS controller, too.)
So the question 'is it 18 bit compatible' makes no sense.
Noel
I've read that there is circuitry in the expansion base (BA40A?) has circuitry . Does anyone know what the circuitry does? Is it required for SCSI operation? (I hope not, or I'll have to kludge one up to make use of pk2k SCSI boot-roms!)
> From: Paul Koning
> But the sector format is a different matter. If it's designed for
> PDP-11 and friends, presumably it has a 512 byte sector size. For
> PDP-10 or -20 use you'd presumably want a sector size consisting of
> some round number of 36 bit words.
Actually, the -10/-20 MASSBUS situation is even more complicated than that.
The MASSBUS can operate in 16 or 18 bit data width (for everyone else; this
is totally different from the Q16/Q18/Q22 of the QBUS, which is _address_
width), so it can support 36-bit words directly, using two extra data lines.
So for the RP04 and other disks, and their 'controllers' (at least, the part
that's in the device), they have to be able to turn the bit-stream from the
mass storage device into 18-bit wide words. (And they actually have different
sector formats depending on whether they are in 16- or 18-bit mode.)
What the KM11 does, I don't know (I'm too lazy to go look at the TM); I would
not at all be suprised to find that it can _only_ operate in 16-bit mode
(i.e. the array of memory chips is 16 bits wide, and it just ships a line at a
time from that out in parallel, so there's no way to even produce 18-bit wide
words). The name of the device (KM11) adds weight to that supposition.
Noel
Subject: Re: PDP-11/73 boot issues
References: <87ilytoikj.fsf at carbon.nat.rhwyd.co.uk> <CADBZjLYN9aUTDHJ6=XJwNnNefTUbzyZis4evRS1Coy2r9xcX5w at mail.gmail.com> <87fstxohuj.fsf at carbon.nat.rhwyd.co.uk> <edde8fc9-6e38-3215-970f-34b9f3a95ce0 at alembic.crystel.com> <21789e85-2aa4-3b61-db31-b21fd8c08a03 at dunnington.plus.com> <87czp1obv4.fsf at carbon.nat.rhwyd.co.uk>
User-agent: mu4e 0.9.18; emacs 27.2
In-reply-to: <87czp1obv4.fsf at carbon.nat.rhwyd.co.uk>
Aaron Jackson via cctalk writes:
> Pete Turnbull via cctalk writes:
>
>> On 21/09/2021 20:34, Chris Zach via cctalk wrote:
>>> Can an MXV11 be used in a 22 bit system? I thought it was an 18 bit
>>> device?
>>
>> MXV11-B is 22-bit. MXV11-A is 18-bit but supposedly can be used in a
>> 22-bit system if the RAM is disabled.
>
> Yeah this is a 22 bit card. Josh sent me an xxdp image which I could
> easily boot from my scsi2sd (thanks!). Seems to be reporting an error
> with the CPU unfortunately:
>
> ]] .R ZKDJ??
> ]] ZKDJB2.BIC
> ]]
> ]] ERROR WHILE TESTING BOARD FUNCTIONS
> ]] ERROR # =001166
> ]] ERROR PC =040662
> ]] 043632
>
> This happens regardless of whether W9 is installed or not (supposedly
> disables the LTC register on the CPU?)
>
> I'll see if I can borrow another CPU card form a friend this
> weekend. Unless anyone else has any ideas? Another suggestion on IRC
> was to disable the PSU LTC and enable the LTC on MXV11 but will need to
> look up some details on how to do this.
Had a nice cycling trip this evening to pick up a spare 11/73
card. Unfortunately it did not fix my issues so I'll have to do some
more digging.
Has anyone disconnected the BEVENT line and used a signal generator to
provide the LTC? Curious to try this to figure out if mine is just being
noisy or something.
Thanks,
Aaron
On Wed, 2021-09-22 at 12:00 -0500, cctalk-request at classiccmp.org wrote:
> Currently the Hobbyist Program covers Alpha and Itanium.? We?ve been
> told it will cover x86 at some point.? I for one can?t wait for x86,
> as I don?t really want to add an Itanium to run some of the newer
> software.
>
> Zane
Not even that... looked at the VSI stuff and it is only the newest
Alphas that are supported. 21064/21164 and, I believe, 21264 are not
supported by any release licensed by VSI, and they changed the PRODUCER
key so you can't use those PAKs on DEC/CPQ/HP variants of VMS.
HP stopped issuing new hobbyist PAKs back very early in 2020. I put in
for a renew March or so and never got it. They were so disinterested in
the program that they didn't mention stopping it, so I guess it isn't
surprising that the page is still up.
Isn't VMS DCL pretty close to RSX? Never used RSX, but that is what I
was always told. Anyway, good system, pretty solid, expect to do a LOT
of typing for commands if you're used to UNIX, and don't put any VAX
with a public DCL account on the Internet because there is a huge
security hole in DCL that was never fixed for VAX.
Hopefully a few of the DEC/VMS fans here might be able to help!
I'm on a bit of a quest. I've been given some old VAX/VMS software -- a
cross compiler and some source code -- that I'd like to get running. My
goal is to get the source code building and experiment with the compiler
a bit.
Problem is that I've never used VMS before, and don't have a clue how to
install or use it.
Can any point me to an idiot's guide to VMS, how to set it up and make
it possible to send files to it from my Linux box?
I'm thinking of using SIMH, unless there's a better emulator available.
I'm still waiting on a reply from HP with a hobbyist licence PAK (I've
filled out the form), but I figure I can get started on the learning
while I wait.
Cheers
Phil.
Hi, Chris,
Where are you, and how long is that cable? I believe that I have a
spare that's around 18".
As luck would have it, I'm moving, and today I'm sorting and culling
the graphics cable tub anyway. If I have a spare I'll save it out.
Doc
I now have a 4-plane color graphics card for my VAXstation 2000, and I'd like to actually connect it to a display.
Does anyone have a DEC BC19S cable that needs a good home? For reference, this has a DA15F connector on one end that plugs into the VAXstation, which leads to a box that screws into the back or base of a display and has the RJ11 and Mini-DIN-7 jacks for keyboard and mouse, and then has three short BNC cables coming out of of it for color video.
I have the parts to make a breakout box if I have to but that'd be more of a pain than giving someone money and having a thing arrive in the mail. :)
-- Chris
A few details for the curious:
It's housed in a BA-11 box with 3 controller cards.
The Massbus paddles fit into that box and terminate in flat ribbon cable,
not the massive cables.
The DRAM chips are 4116s.
manx tells me that these documents were known to exist:
PartTitleStatus
EK-0ML11-TD *ML11 Technical Description
<https://www.vt100.net/manx/part/dec/ek-0ml11-td/>*
EK-0ML11-TM *ML11 Technical Manual
<https://www.vt100.net/manx/part/dec/ek-0ml11-tm/>*
EK-0ML11-UG *ML11 User's Guide
<https://www.vt100.net/manx/part/dec/ek-0ml11-ug/>*
But they are not online.
So I can't say whether they are 18 bit compatible.
Hello,
I had asked this question on the tuhs discord channel, no response yet so i
figured i would try here.
I'm working to get my pdp 11/34 and 11/45 running. I was curious what
versions of unix or bsd would work on the machines i have. I wanted to set
up the systems with a bunch of dumb terminals and show them off at a local
maker fair.
If possible too, id like to be able to telnet in to unix or bsd.I was also
curious if a ethernet interface exists for my unibus systems, or if i could
SLIP/PPP serial to another machine,so i could telnet in as well as use dumb
terminals.
On a bit of a side question, did minix exist for the pdp11? There is
mention of it on wikipedia, but ive not found much other mention of it. I
read the minix book, and have used it quite a bit on the ibm pc, so i
figured i would ask if a copy for the pdp 11 is out there.
--Devin D.
Ok, so out of the basement came a Micrapolis 1325 (the old Dec RD53
disk) with what appears to be stuck heads. Rotor tries to move under
power but can only take out slack. Will move backwards a bit.
Is this stuck head, and what would be the best way to free it? The
reason I'm asking is this disk had a SA1000 adapter mounted under it so
I am pretty sure it was a PERQ disk. Which means data may be priceless.
And of course it's stuck.
Thoughts?
CZ
Clive Sinclair died at 81 after a long illness (probably not Covid)
'course now he is touted as being "the inventor of the pocket calculator"
(as with all "FIRST"s, it leaves out a few predecessors,such as Busicom
(1971, whose contract with Intel led to the 4004), Kilby's 1967 "Cal Tech"
at TI, etc.)
I'm not sure, but the HP35 might even have preceded the Sinclair
calculator.
As with all "FIRST"s, an entry can be saved by redefining the field.
Sinclair's was probably the first one costing 5 pounds or less.
..the compatible Device for the Labtool-48 is the Dataman-48, Software
is here: https://www.dataman.com/dataman-4848lv-resources
Regards,
Holm
----- Forwarded message from Holm Tiffe <holm at freibergnet.de> -----
Date: Wed, 22 Sep 2021 07:45:32 +0200
From: Holm Tiffe <holm at freibergnet.de>
To: Jonathan Stone <kiwi_jonathan at yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: Burnable, patched Microvax-2000 SCSI-boot EPROM images?
Ok..sounds good so far..
I have an Labtool-48 Programmer for example..thats an old Promer with an
parallelport. Software is available for an OEM Device and I'm using that.
Forgot in the moment what this was..but I can check that later.
There are at least 3 Versions of the Promer that are more or less
incompatible to the others, there are "upgrades", with other PCBs in
there..last variant is able to do USB..
I'm owning the "plain" variant.
Another from my stuff is an HiLo ALL07, and I have German made GALEP III
and GALEP IV. All with Centronics Interface.. good Promers.
I think it is ok to have old programmers (and old
programmer-conterollers (old Laptops)) dedicated to them.
I never had to program 3,3V Eproms an such things.. every time old
Devices like Eproms, GALS or even TTL ROMs. 82S100 too..
I'm a german.. and sending Eproms from here seems to be the worst case
to me...
Regards,
Holm
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
Jonathan Stone wrote:
>
>
> On Tuesday, September 21, 2021, 05:39:23 AM PDT, Holm Tiffe via cctalk <cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
>
> >I've tried this almost 2 years before..and it worked "somewhat".
> >An VS2000 booted up in the first stage but the NetBSD Kernel couldn't
> >mount root since nothing in the loader expected a disk at the NCR SCSI
> >interface on the VS2000. Ragge agreed to look at this (bootcode) on my
> >VS2000, but I'vwe couldn't get an ssh connection from the internet to
> >an VS3100 M76 to which the VS2000 console was connected to..to work..
>
> I once "owned" the NetBSD MIPS port, and I've done VAX assembly and kernel code j(e.g., VMS device drivers). If I can't figure it out by comparison to 3100 code, I'll contact Ragge and set up remote access via a BCC08, a NetBSD laptop, and serial. (At least one of the VS200s is jumpered to Vaxstation mode, and I have two GPX daughter-cards on order.)
>
> >For yure I could burn the proms, but I think I'm on the other side of
> >the pond..
>
> I am located in the San Francisco Bay Area. I came here for grad school and never left.
>
> It may be time for me to buy a PROM programmer. Anyone got recommendations for a budget device? "Amazon's choice" is https://www.amazon.com/dp/B082D5NQ2P. The costlier option includes 10 different sockets, and it claims support for 29xxx and 29Cxxx EPROMs, plus lots of others.
>
> The DEC-badged Data-IO " on eBay is tempting, but expensive, and I don't know where to find software.
--
Technik Service u. Handel Tiffe, www.tsht.de, Holm Tiffe,
Goethestrasse 15, 09569 Oederan, USt-Id: DE253710583
info at tsht.de Fax +49 37292 709779 Tel +49 37292 709778 Mobil: 0172 8790 741
----- End forwarded message -----
--
Technik Service u. Handel Tiffe, www.tsht.de, Holm Tiffe,
Goethestrasse 15, 09569 Oederan, USt-Id: DE253710583
info at tsht.de Fax +49 37292 709779 Tel +49 37292 709778 Mobil: 0172 8790 741
I have noted that the Computer History Museum has a number of
donations from XKL re Toad1.
Rich Alderson might be the resident expert for this set of questions.
two questions are thus prompted, and a third teased.
1. Does that XKL version run on the KLH10 emulator?
2. Is the tape CHM has been archived anywhere it might be available
for download?
and the teaser
3. Has anyone created an SSH Server for TOPS20?
thanks
bob smith
It turns out the Priam 806 8-inch SCSI HDD circa 1984 is likely the first
HDD to have a native SCSI interface. It shipped a few months before the
Xebec Owl which is likely second. AFAIK all earlier units had a bridge
controller to a more conventional interface.
If anyone has any different info as to dates and models I would appreciate
it.
Does anyone know where a Priam 806 might be, or have any documentation? The
former probably belongs in a museum and the latter on Bitsavers. I will
help facilitate either.
Tom
t.gardner at computer.org
Hello all,
I have a Data General Model 5220 MT terminal I picked up recently. Sadly, no keyboard. I am trying to find out if the terminal will use a standard AT keyboard (based on the connector) or if I need to find a special DG keyboard. Any help is appreciated.. in fact any information about this device is appreciated.. I?m finding nothing about this terminal on the interwebs!
Thanks!
Other places to post this:
Sun Help Rescue list - mostly Sun but there is interest in other stuff
too. http://www.sunhelp.org/mailman/listinfo/rescuehttp://www.irixnet.org/ , forum not mailing list but seems to have
taken over from Nekochan for SGI stuff.
Sadly don't know of much in the OVMS sphere, the openvmshobbyist forum
is basically dead now.
Reminder - The Kennett Classic Vintage Computing event is only 5 days away!
Many have already pre-registered for the all day vintage computing workshop
and there are still spaces for exhibitors available. After we break for
dinner there will be a chip tunes show from 7PM - 11PM
115 S. Union St.
Kennett Square, PA
(across the street from the museum shop)
484 732 7041
What to do in Kennett Square? Here is a sampling of restaurants within
walking distance of the event space - bring the family!
https://www.kennettclassic.com/while-at-kennett-classic-food/
Hope to see you there!
Bill
kennettclassic.com <----directions and registration here
Given the hot real estate market, I've received an unsolicited
offer to purchase my office building and I'd like to accept it.
This means disposing of a great deal of classic computer stuff in
the next 30 days. I need to let go of what isn't sparking joy,
as they say these days. At least I saved the pieces. What will
best let me part with it is knowing that it went to someone who
also appreciates it.
I'm located in Jefferson, WI, halfway between Madison and Milwaukee.
I'd prefer in-person pickup over shipping, as I have a shortage of
time and adequate shipping boxes for heavy stuff.
Sure, I'll take cash but I also realize I may need to be giving
it away. I'm debating how to do it. Facebook Marketplace?
eBay pick-up only? Just here on CCC? A web site? I'll work on
a more detailed list and pics of what has to go and I'll figure out
the best way to post. Yes, it's unfortunate that I didn't take
a van-load to VCF Midwest a few days ago.
Off the top of my head, a Microvax, a MicroPDP-11, an 11-23,
a Vaxstation, a Kaypro, two CBM PETs, a Tandy M-100 or two, a
Zilog development system, two PDQ-1, a Sage, some S-100 cards,
piles of other cards for various systems, probably a pile of Amiga
stuff (A500, A1000, A2000, A3000, Toasters, early developer docs),
some C-64 or C-128 and software, some Apple II and clone stuff,
Macs from classic on up, a great deal of 3D related software and
manuals from 80s/90s for Amiga/PC/Mac/SGI, several SGIs, a Play Trinity
video system, Palm handhelds and developer stuff, Compaq and HP
handhelds, a Pertec 9-track, an ASR-33, bare 8-inch drives
and cabling, a number of tube monitors of sizes from large and
SGI and Trinitron down to smaller terminals. A serial terminal
or two. A few dot-matrix printers and lasers and ink-jets.
A stack of Pentium Pro 200 chips, bags of other CPUs and older
memory chips.
I have either the world's largest or second-largest collection of
Terak computers, on the order of a dozen, and nine or ten need to go.
Plus other interconnecting stuff, BNC cable, serial and parallel, etc.
Docs like a decade of SIGGRAPH proceedings, Inside Mac, years of
MSDN CD sets (Intel/MIPS/AXP era), sets of late-80s early-90s
computer magazines (inc. early BYTE and Kilobaud and Dr. Dobbs,
Amiga mags, video industry mags).
A pile of early WISP outdoor WiFi era antennas (dishes, panels,
directionals of various dB, N connector) and associated heavy coax.
Plus a fair pile of more "contemporary" PC stuff from the last 20 years.
Misc cards, VLB, EISA, etc. A bunch of PCs, plus IDE and SATA drives.
Many misc. consumer firewalls.
Some odd laser and optical stuff. A number of older lab-quality
microscopes like a projector scope, several desk microscopes,
a black Leitz Ortholux, an articulated standing Zeiss surgical scope.
A Leitz Focomat II photo enlarger and all the extras.
An AMRAY electron microscope.
And just to put fear in your heart, what doesn't go will go to you
will go to the electronics scrapper and the dumpster.
Send me an email...
- John
Per https://www.tuhs.org/cgi-bin/utree.pl?file=2.9BSD/usr/doc/2.9_kernel.ms
2.9BSD had a driver for it.
On 9/20/21, cctech-request at classiccmp.org <cctech-request at classiccmp.org> wrote:
> Send cctech mailing list submissions to
> cctech at classiccmp.org
>
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> or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to
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>
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> than "Re: Contents of cctech digest..."
>
>
> Today's Topics:
>
> 1. DEC ML11 (Mark Kahrs)
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Mon, 20 Sep 2021 10:47:46 -0400
> From: Mark Kahrs <mark.kahrs at gmail.com>
> To: "General Discussion: On-Topic Posts Only" <cctech at classiccmp.org>
> Subject: DEC ML11
> Message-ID:
> <CAEokdfcZ3YZZQ7UuYjV0VEy-AJV2R6CkZH+K6aCJC2gXBAH3vg at mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
>
> I've been working on a newly donated PDP 11/70 at the LSSM. I just
> discovered it has a ML11 --- an early Solid State Disk. Does anyone know
> of any schematics, user guides, etc?
>
> Thanks!
>
>
> End of cctech Digest, Vol 84, Issue 14
> **************************************
>
I've been working on a newly donated PDP 11/70 at the LSSM. I just
discovered it has a ML11 --- an early Solid State Disk. Does anyone know
of any schematics, user guides, etc?
Thanks!
Went over to chip away at the Bob basement, and this time Alex came with
me. This is not a bad idea as if one of the piles shift and I get stuck
it would be nice to have someone there to call 911. Anyway we cleared
out a lot of the stuff in the tunnel to the Perqs including:
A Franklin computer, in box.
A TRS80 Model 3
An Apollo 3500 or so server box (heavy)
A Sun2 something
A sun 3/60 (I remember these!)
A Sparcserver 10,000 (heavy beyond belief)
Some sort of an IBM AS400 thing (also heavy)
An Apple II/e.
Few more hard drives
Weird scope like things
The good news is the way to the MicroVax and the Perqs are clear. The
bad news is these are Perq2's which are bulky and there is still a
pedestal mounted Sun 3/110 in the way.
Moral: Do not die with a lot of this stuff in your basement. We were far
more able to move this stuff 30 years ago when we were young than today.
We may need more people. 2 hours of working that pile left us both
trashed. Ian, want to come over sometime?
C
Clive SInclair was a British entrepreneur who designed and built very small
computers back in the early days of 8-bit computing. Whether he created a
'first' as Fred argues doesn't lessen his role in microcomputing history.
Let's celebrate pioneers who gave us what we have today.
Happy computing.
Murray ?
Hello,
You mentioned a VAXstation and a Microvax. What encosures are they in? (That will affect shipping costs).
Is the micro-pdp/11 in a BA23 with complete skins?
thanks
-Jonathan Stone
Only 9 days until the 2nd-annual Kennett Classic
URL for more info: https://www.kennettclassic.com/
Download flyer:
https://www.kennettclassic.com/kc2/kennett-classic-flyer-KC-II.pdf
WHAT: Our yearly event to celebrate another year of operations.
WHERE: 115 S. Union St. Kennett Square, PA USA (Between Philadelphia and
Baltimore). The venue is called "The Garage", it's a large ventilated
building located across the street from the museum.
WHEN:
[ 8AM ] the workshop / hackerspace opens
[ 12 Noon - 5PM ] - open to "the public" exhibits
So far we have about 10 exhibits - We could use a few more, please inquire
if interested.
[ 5-7PM ] - Retooling for the music performances / Dinner
There are a dozen restaurants within walking distance and lots to do in
Kennett Square, PA or you can use that time to tour the museum, or just
stay in the building and continue your work
[ 7PM - 11PM ] Live Chiptune / Wave-bending performances!
--BANDS--
AP0C
Inverse Phase
Cheap Dinosaurs
(sound clip links from kennettclassic.com)
QUESTIONS? https://www.kennettclassic.com/contact.cfm
PFT made MOD-U-LINE MCLS modular aluminum enclosures (sides, top and front/back).
The only information on the web is
https://www.ceitron.com/passive/pft.html
Does anyone still have a copy of their brochure?
They were used a lot for projects in the 70's and 80's like the PCM-12
The company was bought by Zero Mfg in the 90's. There isn't anyone making
anything like that now.
http://www.dvq.com/oldcomp/PCM12/pcm12-1.jpg
Quick question: I've been cleaning out and repairing an HP5061 supply
for a 1000 computer. However I didn't take a picture of the 4 boards
when I pulled them and I want to make sure they go in the right places.
From the manual (page 99 of 92851-90001_Sections-IXB_Mar-1981.pdf) the
slots are labeled A6-J1 through A6-J5. Does this mean that:
J1 is the
J5 is the control board (A3A5)
J4 is a jumper board for +12 adjustments
J3 is unused (battery backup boards)
J2 is the inverter board (A3A2)
J1 is the pre-regulator board (A3A1)
Seems right but I know how bad things can go :-)
Thanks!
C
Hi,
If anyone is interested, these are available for cost of postage from
Toronto Canada. I will post selected sets but if someone wants the lot,
be quick. First come, first served...
https://imgur.com/MggLbvQ
--Toby
Hi All,
Does anyone by chance have a collection of fans? The one in my Sun Sparc
Classic died and I am having a hard time finding a replacement with the
same specs. Or can anyone recommend a good source?
It's a Nidec BetaV, TA225DC, Model M33402-55
Thanks!
-Kurt
Hi all,
I've been working on a BA11-K PDP-11/34 lately, and wow it sure is a noisy thing...
On my '11/45, the "Boxer" fans were easily disassembled via a cir-clip, and could then have their bearings cleaned/relubed (or worst case replaced). Fan maintenance quieted down the /45 a good bit. But these larger 6" Amphenol units don't look quite as easy to get in to...
Is the plastic rotor on these just a press fit? Any tricks to getting in there for maintenance? Or are these "you have what you have" and the only option if unsatisfied with their current performance to replace them entirely?
cheers,
--FritzM.
I've been having fun this past week trying to get the mechanics of a Canon CX print engine
in a LaserWriter restored. The paper pick and separation rollers have turned to goo.
This got me thinking that people need to start collecting information on rubber parts,
like dimensions, material and durometer values for all of these parts before they fail.
I found nothing on line about making replacement parts for these. No one stocks replacement
parts for anything older than a Canon SX engine (the generation after the CX).
Another problem child are Datamation card readers. It's been 20 years now since the
last ones were pulled out of service after the 2000 election and there seems to be a steady
stream of people trying to make replacements. I think the CHM 1401 guys replaced theirs a
few years ago, don't know if they collected mechanical info or where the repair units were made.
I've also heard that Terry of Terry's Rubber Rollers is recovering from Covid, and a
frequently used place that refurbished typewriter platens has gone out of business.
People have suggested https://www.jjshort.com/Recovered-Rubber-Rollers.php as an
alternative.
With apologies for breaking the threading, as I've just rejoined and I'm
responding to something I've just spotted in the archive ...
Regarding colour separations for scanned documents, GraphicsMagick is
quite capable of producing the required individual colour layers. If
you identify the colours you wish to pull out, you can use the "-fuzz"
and "-opaque" operators to change any given colour range (fuzz uses
Euclidean distance in RGB space) into another one (the current "-fill"
colour).
I haven't finished writing this up, but my workflow tends to be to
produce a Group4 TIFF from the colour scan by simple thresholding (or
first dropping the other colours to white, if they are quite dark), and
then produce all the other separations by dropping black out,
converting your spot colour to black and then thresholding. This way
you get two or more images:
1) PNG(s) containing pixels that are all either white or your spot
colour,
2) a G4 TIFF for the black and white layer.
The PNG must be saved as a two-colour paletted image so that they can
be used as masks in the final PDF. I always apply the black and white
(text) layer on top of every page, so that the fuzzing of the colour
layers doesn't reduce the clarity of the text.
This might sound awkward, but I've found that one fuzz value tends to
work for all the pages when extracting a given colour, so you can
process all pages in a loop. I use the Perl module PDF::Builder to put
my scans together, but I think tumble is capable of overlays too.
PNGs are compressed with deflate. If the spot colours you are
processing apply to text in the document, my first thought was that I
could save a bunch of Group4 TIFFs, one for each colour, and mask those
into the PDF, because Group4 compression is impressive for text. It took
some frustrating experiments before realising the Group4 compression
isn't defined for two colour images in general; it is specifically for
images that are black and white, and PDF won't let you circumvent that!
I've just scanned another document with some blue diagrams and table
backgrounds, if you'd like to see an example:
https://vt100.net/dec/ek-0la75-ug-002.pdf
I might reprocess this later, but for now, I didn't even bother
separating out pages that contain blue from ones that don't; every page
has a blue layer, even if it's blank. If you're wide awake, you may
spot that the blue layer on page 41 doesn't extend to the bottom of the
table. This isn't a processing flaw; the document is actually printed
like that.
Regards,
Paul
Bitraf[1] is moving, and the NDwiki[2] server moves with it. The move
starts Saturday September 11th 2021 at 12:00 hours local time, and is
expected to be completed sometime before midnight.
References:
1) https://bitraf.no/
2) http://www.ndwiki.org/
--
Regards,
Torfinn Ingolfsen
Due to health problems I won't be able to attend vcfmw this year.
I live just outside Champaign, IL, I-57 & I-74, about 2 hours south of
I-80, and 2 hours west of INDY. If anyone is interested in l buying
anything I should be home a few days before, during and after WCFMW.
Please email me with the time and day you would like to stop, and what you
are interested in seeing/buying.
I hoped to hang on to most things for a while, but I'm afraid I'm going to
start letting loose more and more.
Thanks, Paul
I'm located just outside Champaign, IL, I-57 & I-74
I was digging through the internet and found a post where a 3803 was posted for sale, would there happen to still be one available?Preferably a model 2
Thanks,gcnielson at yahoo.com
I just started working on a Data General NOVA 2/10 which is in quite
reasonable cosmetic condition, but has a number of problems.
The system comes with 8 kwords plus 16 kwords of core boards and a
"Cassette I/O" board and the CPU board.
After reforming the "man sized" caps and verified the power rails I took a
leap of faith and plugged in the CPU and the 16 kword core board. I managed
to deposit a few bit patterns and read back mostly what I deposited. After
a few power cycles I could no longer deposit values and read back what I
deposited. I also noticed that a 30 Ohm resistor rated at 3W which
previously got quite warm now stayed cold. That PCB area around that
resistor has cooked in the past and has changed colour - not dramatic, but
it obviously got quite hot in the past.
Unfortunately I didn't find a good schematic specifically for the Nova
2/10. There is one for the Nova 2/4 up on Bitsavers, but it is hard to read
and does not cover the NOVA 2/10 which is not quite the same as the NOVA
2/4. For example the power supply is completely different.
Until now I have been spoiled with quite decent DEC PDP-8/e documentation
and would be surprised if Data General did not provide a similar level and
quality of documentation. Maybe I am looking in the wrong place.
Thanks
Tom Hunter
I have an Interpro 2020 and a couple of HUGE 19" inch Intergraph
monitors. Frankly they are pretty lousy (fuzzy, not all that
luminescent), heavy and awkward.
Free to a Good Home - cables included. But I won't ship them, though
one could pay someone to crate them up and ship them.
I really don't want them around, and so I just converted my Interpro
2020 to use LCD flatpanels with a DB5w5 to VGA cable.
You can read more about my new cable setup for this machine, and see one
of the old monitors, at:
https://www.computercollection.net/index.php/unix-workstations/#interpro2020
JRJ
Can anyone identify this IC?
https://imgur.com/a/CU7Cn8z
This is from an Omega VLF receiver. I don't see many custom parts within
this unit, but perhaps this is one?
Thanks,
Kyle
Hi,
If you're interested, contact me directly.
It was in my apartment for years, I had to move it to the garage, and I
don't like the idea of leaving it there for the winter.
It's a PDP11/40 in a DEC rack. It was in working condition when I got it,
only the memory card had a problem (1 capacitor has been ripped off), but
reading/writing from/to the registers was working.
No need to say that you have to arrange shipping !
Thanks,
--
St?phane
Hi all,
you're invited to the Update computer club[0] public lecture series
"Updateringar"[1]!
When: 2021-09-11, 19:00 CEST
Where: https://bbb.cryptoparty.se/b/upd-0mo-m2u-aq8
The evolution of TECO and EMACS ? hands-on demo
The Emacs text editor has long been an important tool among programmers,
and has a long and rich history. I will talk about the development of
the TECO and Emacs line of editors throughout history. The emphasis is
on practical demonstration of programs found through software
archaeology. True to form, the bulk of the presentation will be
broadcast using ancient technology.
Lars Brinkhoff (ICtech)
The lecture is free and open to everyone.
Upcoming: 2021-10-09, 19:00: Update Computer Club: History and
not-so-certain future. Pontus Pihlgren (Update)
Don't want to miss upcoming events? Subscribe to our low-traffic
announcement list by sending a mail with the body "subscribe announce"
to majordomo at update.uu.se!
Hope to see you there,
Anke
[0] https://www.update.uu.se/index_eng.html
[1] https://www.update.uu.se/wiki/doku.php/projekt:updateringar
Hi folks,
I'm testing a little BlueSCSI adapter (BlueSCSI <https://scsi.blue/>) which
while being aimed at 68K Macs should also work as an 8 bit target for older
VAXen, it's a newer cheaper SCSI2SD solution and I should point out it
works as intended on a Mac Plus so the module itself is fine.
Nobody appears to have tested on small VAXen yet so tonight I dug out my
VLC to give it a go.
Powering up with nothing attached apart from an MMJ/H8571 cable I get
nothing on the console, I'm using PuTTY via a genuine COM1 port on a PC
which is one level above what I used last time I powered the machine up
(FTDI USB adapter to a laptop). Diagnostic LEDs cycle through the tests and
end up at '1111 0011' which according to the manual is 'entering the
console program'.
Clearly the DALLAS has passed the TOY tests, but if it's not happy would
that stop the console displaying? It doesn't matter how I set S3, next step
I guess is to hook it up to a 'proper' VT.
Cheers,
--
Adrian Graham
Owner of Binary Dinosaurs, the UK's biggest private home computer
collection?
t: @binarydinosaurs f: facebook.com/binarydinosaurs
w: www.binarydinosaurs.co.uk
Another query. The foam filter that sits in the front of my 11/24 CPU is
clearly badly degraded and needs to be replaced. What do people replace this
kind of stuff with? I guess it mustn't be too fine, this mesh seems quite
coarse.
https://rjarratt.files.wordpress.com/2021/09/1124-front-panel-2.jpg
Thanks
Rob
I have a PDP 11/24 which I hope to power up soon. The last time it had power
I noticed a bit of a burning smell which I failed to track down. However, I
did notice one capacitor on a memory board has a strange appearance, almost
as if there is some corrosion under the surface, it doesn't seem to be
bulging though, except along the top, but if it is bulging it is very bumpy.
I have a picture of it here:
https://rjarratt.files.wordpress.com/2021/09/wp_20210904_10_15_28_rich.jpg.
It is marked 47uF 30V, but it is also marked 20v as can be seen in the
picture.
I lifted it to measure its capacitance and ESR. It measures about 80uF and
the ESR seems OK. I am unsure whether to replace it, and if so what voltage
rating should I replace it with? I don't understand if this is a 30V rated
capacitor or 20V. It seems that Unibus has some 20V signals, so I guess 20V
might be right? I don't think 30V or 20V parts exist though, so I would need
to get 35V or 25V. Maybe the voltage rating isn't too critical?
Any advice?
Thanks
Rob
Somehow these were sitting in my basement rafters for years.
The tape seems ok on the big reels but I believe one of the small
reels was gummy. Several write rings on the pile too.
I'd rather not have to box these up TBQH but I will if someone
really wants them.
Location Ottawa Ontario Canada
http://www.db.net/~db/tapes.png
Diane
--
db at FreeBSD.org db at db.nethttp://www.db.net/~db