>From: "Sellam Ismail" <foo(a)siconic.com>
>On Thu, 2 Jan 2003, Dwight K. Elvey wrote:
>
>> >On Thu, 2 Jan 2003, John Lawson wrote:
>> >
>> >> On Thu, 2 Jan 2003, Vintage Computer Festival wrote:
>> >>
>> >> > I've got the PICK CHECK signal from the reader going into CB2. I have
>> a
>> >> > 1K resistor going from CB2 to ground.
>> >> ^^^^^^^^^^^
>> >> Try changing to 5K or even 10K (what I always use for pull ups/downs in
>> >> TTL work. I think you're burying the poor PICK CHECK signal. Actually
>> >> all the resistors oughta be 10K, IMHO.
>> >
>> >I'll certainly try that. But I'm wondering why that should be necessary
>> >when the 6522 data sheet says that particular pin is a TTL level output.
>>
>> Hi
>> I thought you were using the pin as an input. As an input,
>> there is no pullup and a floating pin would not be good.
>
>The pin is an input, but it's normal state is to be off/false. Therefore,
>John's suggestion to put a pulldown resistor on it seems logical. It
>should be normally off, and the M200 should bring it high when it wants to
>signal the PICK CHECK error.
>
>I'm trying to troubleshoot a more pressing problem right now: the reader
>is picking 5 cards before the Apple thinks 80 Index Marks (e.g. 80
>characters) have been detected. Either my code is wrong, my code is slow,
>or the Apple is too slow to handle the reader input (in which case this
>was all for naught).
Hi
It sounds like something is wrong. Are you reading with BASIC
or at code level. I would think that assembly code should be able
to keep up, as long as you were not expecting it to transfer to
disk while reading. Does the M200 have any kind of handshake?
Dwight
>
>I'm heading off to Radio Shack to take a mental break and to get some
>resistors and to see if they can offer me more than just blank stares.
>
>Sellam Ismail Vintage Computer Festival
>------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>International Man of Intrigue and Danger http://www.vintage.org
>
> * Old computing resources for business and academia at www.VintageTech.com *
>
>
>From: "Sellam Ismail" <foo(a)siconic.com>
>
>On Thu, 2 Jan 2003, John Lawson wrote:
>
>> On Thu, 2 Jan 2003, Vintage Computer Festival wrote:
>>
>> > I've got the PICK CHECK signal from the reader going into CB2. I have
a
>> > 1K resistor going from CB2 to ground.
>> ^^^^^^^^^^^
>> Try changing to 5K or even 10K (what I always use for pull ups/downs in
>> TTL work. I think you're burying the poor PICK CHECK signal. Actually
>> all the resistors oughta be 10K, IMHO.
>
>I'll certainly try that. But I'm wondering why that should be necessary
>when the 6522 data sheet says that particular pin is a TTL level output.
Hi
I thought you were using the pin as an input. As an input,
there is no pullup and a floating pin would not be good.
Dwight
>
>Sellam Ismail Vintage Computer
Festival
>---------------------------------------------------------------------------
---
>International Man of Intrigue and Danger
http://www.vintage.org
>
> * Old computing resources for business and academia at www.VintageTech.com
*
>
>
I have an ATT 6300 with 640 kb ram, msdos 3.30 keyboard and monitor in working condition. The keys need some prompting but a good cleaning will probably work. I will only sell as a set.
jim
Hi people. I'm looking for the chassis to a PS/2 Server 95. Not a 95XP,
but a 95A. The one with the longer connector plate and two parallel
ports. I'd prefer if it was somewhere in the northeastern U.S. The New
York area would be optimal. If you want, you can have the PC Server 500
chassis from which I am borrowing the motherboard.
Another thing is that I need the people who were interested in the PS/2
100Mbps ethernet cards to email me again. I now am able to send them out.
$50+shipping apiece.
The third thing is that I am looking for 8MB SIMM's for a PS/2 Model 95.
They are the ECC kind.
Fourth, I am getting rid of a lot of PS/2 SCSI cards, 286 RAM Expansion
cards with RAM, and a couple of 386 RAM Expansion cards with RAM. I also
have a couple of other weird MCA cards, so if there's anything in
particular you're looking for, let me know. I do have a couple of IBM
M-Motion Video Capture Adapter/A's *new in box*, if you're interested.
That should be it.
Peace... Sridhar
Bradley:
Pat's advice about using RJ11 with the tab cut
off is workable, but it's probably better to use
MMJ if you possibly can.
MMJ connectors are easy to find, and DB25 - MMJ
adaptors are also easy to find. Then, all
that's needed is 6 conductor flat cable, also
easy to find, and an MMJ crimper -- not very
easy to find, and expensive.
I can easily make up MMJ cable(s) for you if you
need one or two. I can check my stock of
DB25/MMJ adaptors, too. What gender DB25 is
needed? (I don't have a 3000 to look at, to
make sure.)
email me off list -- we can get this one worked
out.
Don
(Sorry if this is a repeat, but the original didn't appear on the list.)
I've been looking for a Symmetric 375 (a rare beast) for sometime without luck
and now I'd like to expand my search to other smaller 32000 machines (e.g.
Tektronix 63xx/43xx and the lovely Whitechapel MG-1). Anyone looking for a
good home for such a machine? Why 32000s? I just like to be different I
guess. :)
Best regards,
Jeffrey Katcher
jmkatcher(a)yahoo.com
__________________________________________________
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>From: "Sellam Ismail" <foo(a)siconic.com>
>
>On Fri, 3 Jan 2003, John Lawson wrote:
>
>> Bravo, Sellam! Really great work! Seems a simple modification to the
>> program would allow it to read paper tape as well.....
>
>Actually, I was eyeing the pinouts of that paper tape reader that was
>posted and was thinking, "Hey, I can build an interface for that" ;)
>
>Actually, my next task like this will probably be to get one of my paper
>tape readers interface so I can start dumping all these paper tapes I have
>from different systems.
Hi Sellam
You know I have a reader that I connect to a printer port on a PC?
You can borrow that any time you want.
Dwight
>
>Sellam Ismail Vintage Computer Festival
>------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>International Man of Intrigue and Danger http://www.vintage.org
>
> * Old computing resources for business and academia at www.VintageTech.com *
>
>
Hi.
As this is a bit to big to ship across the "big pond"...
Please contact Paul directly.
----- Forwarded message from Paul Vixie <paul(a)vix.com> -----
Delivered-To: port-vax(a)netbsd.org
From: Paul Vixie <paul(a)vix.com>
To: port-vax(a)netbsd.org
Subject: anybody want a vax 6400, sa600, tu81+?
X-Mailer: MH-E 7.0; nmh 1.0.4; Emacs 21.2
Date: Fri, 03 Jan 2003 03:36:15 +0000
Precedence: list
this was matt thomas's but he left it at isc too long so i'm regifting it.
anyone who can come to redwood city can have it.
otherwise it has to go to the scrap yard.
reply to me personally plz.
----- End forwarded message -----
--
tschüß,
Jochen
Homepage: http://www.unixag-kl.fh-kl.de/~jkunz
Hello, all:
This is my first post for 2003 so I'd like to wish everyone a happy
and healthy New Year.
Over the vacation I dug out my Seiko/Epson 486 computer. It's a POS
(point-of-sale) computer that I bought from Timeline two years ago and that
I sometimes use for simple PC-based data collection projects. It's a really
small 486-based machine with 32mb of RAM and a 10g laptop drive.
Unfortunately, I can't find the manual now and Espon's Web site doesn't have
it.
It's model IM-403/IM-405 (mine is the 405 but the models are
essentially the same). If anyone has this and can make a copy, I'd
appreciate it.
Thanks.
Rich Cini
Collector of classic computers
Build Master for the Altair32 Emulation Project
Web site: http://highgate.comm.sfu.ca/~rcini/classiccmp/
/************************************************************/
Apologies, I know this isn't really ClassicCMP related, but I'm
hopeful that some of the Solaris admins here can help me out...
I installed Solaris 8 2/02 on my Thinkpad 760EL. I chose the
deafault
end-user collection, plus the freeware file compression utilities...
Now, when I start it up, or reboot it, the GUI is fine. But when
I only logout, though, I get a bunch of vertical lines across the
screen. I
also get the lines when I select "Remote Login" from the Option menu on
the login screen. Seems like something to do with the display manager
restarting.
I downloaded and added the XF86 packages from Sun (which
included 2
patches), but those drivers were no help. I even found and tried a
different .xqa driver description. No go.
Anybody have any ideas? Feel free to respond to me directly...
--
---Dave Woyciesjes
---ICQ# 905818
Most of the remains of my collection will become available in the next couple
days. Known to be up for grabs here is a PDP-11/44 with a blown PSU (but
otherwise working), a PDP-11/34A of unknown configuration, miscellaneous
DEC paraphernalia, some MicroVAX stuff, and miscellaneous old modem equipment.
Basically, I was thrown out of home some time ago, and left a lot of stuff
behind as I had nowhere to take it. My mom is sick of waiting for me to take
care of the remaining gear and wants it out, now. I have 3 weeks to move it
or it goes to the dump.
I have nowhere to take it and no foreseeable future for any of it in my
possession. For some twisted reason I am taking the KS10 with me - I guess
I don't quite want to admit that my career is over. I don't know how I'm
getting it here but I'll push it if I have to, dammit.
If nobody is in the area to save anything, I can salvage what I can and scrap
the remainder. I'll have to visit the garage in the next couple days to see
what exactly is left.
I can't afford to ship anything anywhere. If you want something and I have it
you have to come to Peoria, IL and get it.
All of the boards I had have already been destroyed, as was most of the
documentation and paperwork.
If I don't get a response by the 10th I will assume nobody is available.
Hopefully someone else can get a better run with this stuff than I could.
-------
----- Original Message -----
From: "Dave McGuire" <mcguire(a)neurotica.com>
To: <rescue(a)sunhelp.org>
Sent: Thursday, January 02, 2003 11:09 PM
Subject: [rescue] Fwd: anybody want a vax 6400, sa600, tu81+?
> Someone *please* rescue this. I'd do it myself but I have no way to
> get it to this coast. Contact Paul directly.
What he said!
>
> -Dave
>
> Begin forwarded message:
> > From: Paul Vixie <paul(a)vix.com>
> > Date: Thu Jan 2, 2003 10:36:15 PM US/Eastern
> > To: port-vax(a)netbsd.org
> > Subject: anybody want a vax 6400, sa600, tu81+?
> >
> > this was matt thomas's but he left it at isc too long so i'm regifting
> > it.
> >
> > anyone who can come to redwood city can have it.
> >
> > otherwise it has to go to the scrap yard.
> >
> > reply to me personally plz.
> >
> >
>
> --
> Dave McGuire "She's a cheek pincher. I have scars."
> St. Petersburg, FL -Gary Nichols
> _______________________________________________
> rescue list - http://www.sunhelp.org/mailman/listinfo/rescue
Hi,
In the San Jose, CA area...
I have a tektronix type 310A o'scope that needs some help in the horz.
sweep area.
I am not well versed in the art of component level repair. What can I
do to get this guy back up and
running?
Thanks for your help!
Ron.
I'm sure this is a familiar question to many - does
anyone have a list of the two-digit codes displayed on
the PDP11-73 during power-up ? I am resurrecting a
dormant unit which stops at '1' (I have only the CPU
and memory installed in the backplane) I'm not sure if
this is a good or a bad code. Any help would be
appreciated.
Thanks,
David Comley
__________________________________________________
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A friend stopped me in the parking lot of an auction today and gave me a box
full of computer stuff and in it was a TI-74 BASICALC with a carrying case
and 8k RAM module in it. Also it came with a Quick Reference Card for Basic
Syntax.
At the auction I got something called "The Brick" by Ergo computing Inc..
It's a cool looking 386SX-16 as per this article from a google search: "The
Ergo Brick, a 3" x 8" x 11" totable PC, was billed as the "cure for the
common computer." With a keyboard and monitor at home, another at work, it
gave desktop power in a portable package. Today you could fit three
PowerBook G4/500s in almost the same amount of space as the $2,495 16 MHz
386sx-based Brick.". I got the CPU, power supply, manual, and a carrying
case. The keyboard was missing.
> At the auction I got something called "The Brick" by Ergo computing Inc..
> It's a cool looking 386SX-16 as per this article from a google search: "The
> Ergo Brick, a 3" x 8" x 11" totable PC, was billed as the "cure for the
> common computer." With a keyboard and monitor at home, another at work, it
> gave desktop power in a portable package. Today you could fit three
> PowerBook G4/500s in almost the same amount of space as the $2,495 16 MHz
> 386sx-based Brick.". I got the CPU, power supply, manual, and a carrying
> case. The keyboard was missing.
Hey, that's pretty cool. I remember drooling over adds for those around
1990! If you look through issues of "PC Magazine" from about that timeframe
you should be able to find the adds. Of course I didn't remember it being
so big...
Didn't they give it a greyish bricklike finish?
Zane
I believe I now have my TU-56 and TD8E working. When I mount a tape and
attempt to boot my one OS/8 tape it loads to the point of printing
"SYSTEM ERR" on the teletype. I strongly suspect that the tape is
probably corrupt. I'm wondering if there is anyone out there who would
be willing to copy any kind of Bootable PDP-8/E tape for me so I can
test with a known good tape. I would be more than willing to provide a
couple of tapes for the copy.
--
Christopher L McNabb
Operating Systems Analyst Email: cmcnabb(a)4mcnabb.net
Virginia Tech ICBM: 37.1356N 80.4272N
GMRS: WPSR255 ARS: N2UX Grid Sq: EM97SD
>From: "Sellam Ismail" <foo(a)siconic.com>
>
>On Thu, 2 Jan 2003, Tony Duell wrote:
>
>> > The main problem I'm having is reading the control lines of the 6522.
>> > According to the spec sheet, CB1, CB2 and CA2 are all supposed to be TTL
>> > level outputs when programmed for such. So they are, but I'm having
>>
>> Do you mean output or input here? If you're reading a pin, then I would
>> have assumed you were using it as an input.
>
>Sorry for confusing the hell out of anyone. I meant input. From the 6522
>datasheet:
>
>"CA1 is a high impedance input, while CA2 represents one standard TTL load
>in the input mode."
>
>...and regarding CB1 and CB2...
>
>"Each control line represents one standard TTL load in the input mode and
>can drive one TTL load in the output mode."
>
>> Try a pull-up instead (TTL sinks a lot better than it sources). In other
>> words change the end of the resistor from ground to +5V
>>
>> make this +5V
>> |
>> V
>> > READER SIGNAL----+----/\/\/\-------GND
>> > |
>> > |
>> > 6522 CB2
>
>Wouldn't this give me a default state of logical true on the input pin?
Hi
For a TTL, one normally has an open pin set to one. One pulls
it to zero to be active. Ever notice that all of the strobes and
such for things like parallel ports on a PC are always negative.
For those pins that you are using as inputs, make sure that
you've set the direction register correctly.
Dwight
>
>> If you still have problems, then maybe the driver chip in the M200 has
>> died. It happens. I've had a couple of HP9810 calculators across my bench
>> where there were 10 or so dead TTL chips (74Hxxx TTL chips especially)
>> that appeared to work, but which couldn't give a proper output signal,
>> so the chip it was connected to didn't always get the right logic level.
>
>Well, it works, just not all the time. So from what John has told me, it
>seems like the signal is just being lost half the time.
>
>Sellam Ismail Vintage Computer Festival
>------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>International Man of Intrigue and Danger http://www.vintage.org
>
> * Old computing resources for business and academia at www.VintageTech.com *
>
>
Ok, I'm almost there. I've got everything wired up and most of the driver
software done.
The main problem I'm having is reading the control lines of the 6522.
According to the spec sheet, CB1, CB2 and CA2 are all supposed to be TTL
level outputs when programmed for such. So they are, but I'm having
trouble reading CB2 reliably. I put a pull-down resistor on it but that
doesn't help. The signal to it is spotty for some reason.
I've got the PICK CHECK signal from the reader going into CB2. I have a
1K resistor going from CB2 to ground.
READER SIGNAL----+----/\/\/\-------GND
|
|
6522 CB2
If there's an error (misfeed for instance) CB2 should get a logical TRUE.
This works sometimes, but not always. And it's the same whether I have
the pull-down resistor or not. I'm using CB1 reliable without the need
of a pull-down resistor.
I don't know if it's sloppy code or a bug, but the Apple doesn't seem fast
enough to read and process the data character by character. I would think
that it should be fast enough to do so but I'll have to check the timing
on the loop and see if it falls within the specs of each column read from
the reader. For now I've switched to buffering the data and then
processing it after each card read, controlling the picker with the
software to control the flow of cards.
I'm figuring out the code for the last piece which decodes the row pin
into a decimal number. What's the best way to do an nth root operation in
6502 assembly? :)
Crummy way:
LDY #00
LOOP INY
LSR
BCC LOOP
This assumes only 1 bit is set in the accumulator. It loops until the bit
falls off from the LSR operation. Assuming the accumulator has #80 to
begin with, the Y-register result should be 8.
--
Sellam Ismail Vintage Computer Festival
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
International Man of Intrigue and Danger http://www.vintage.org
* Old computing resources for business and academia at www.VintageTech.com *
According to the Guide, the p/n's should either be 110091-011 and 110092-011
(for ROM Revision H.6) or 110091-0012 and 110092-012 ( for Revision H.7).
Bob
-----Original Message-----
From: Ethan Dicks [mailto:erd_6502@yahoo.com]
Sent: Thursday, January 02, 2003 10:09 AM
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Subject: Compaq 286/SLT (was RE: Anyone have any experience replacing a
Dallas 1287 with a 12887?)
<snip>
My ROMs have stickers with p/n 110091-011 and 110091-012, (c) 1988.
-ethan
Hi David
It may not be as hard as you'd think. First, you don't have
to cross compile CPM-8000. There already is a CPM-8000. Recently,
source and release code was found for this and, working with Chris
Groessle, we've managed to bring it up on our Olivetti M20's.
This code was originally written for the M20, as it was the only
major machine sold with a Z8000 ( there were a few SBC's out there ).
The release comes with a C compiler and an assembler. There is
source code for the BIOS as well. It does depend on the M20
ROM code for low level access. This CPM was mostly written by
a combination of Zilog and DR people. It is mostly written in
C with a minimum written in assembly.
There are a few issues. Even though the manual says you can get by
with only 128K, this would be difficult. Several of the utilities
require two 64K chunks ( one for instruction and one for data ).
It would be best if the other system functions had there own piece
of RAM to work in. One needs to map the memory such that you can
access a single 64K as both instruction and data as well as
the 128K as 64k instruction and 64k data.
The bad news is that we don't have the complete source for the
CPM. The BIOS does require that it be compiled on a running CPM-8000.
As the documents state, it would be difficult to build it on
some other system. Still if someone is willing to write a BIOS
for their board, I'd be willing to compile the code for them on
my machine.
Dwight
>From: "Kane, David (DPRS)" <David.Kane(a)aph.gov.au>
>
>Hi,
>
>I always wanted to play with this processor, I just never got the chance. I
have a copy of the Zilog "Microcomputer Components - Data Book Feb 1980" and
a copy of "Programming the Z8000" (a Sybec book), but that is about as far
as I ever got. I was tinkering with the thought of modding the SIMH emulator
to include a Z8000 system, but I don't have any details or experience of any
real systems. I then though to invent a fictitious S100 system, based on the
existing Altair emulation, but with a Z8000 CPU. This could most likely run
a CPM8000 system, with the appropriate BDOS changes. But a lot of work would
be need to get a set of compilers/cross compilers for the Z8000, either in
tracking them down or writing them. I saw recently that BDS C has been put
into the public domain with full source, so there might be some avenue
there. Still to generate CPM (or MPM) for a fictitious machine would be a
mammoth undertaking, I have all the source code needed, just not the
compilers. It would require an 8080/Z80 to Z8000 cross assembler (to avoid
rewriting all the assembler), a Z8000 PLM compiler, and a Z8000 C compiler.
>
>Anyway I am declaring myself an unfulfilled fan of the Z8000 processor
family.
>
>David Kane
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: G?nter Mewes [mailto:info@mewesbus.de]
>Sent: Saturday, 28 December 2002 12:49 AM
>To: cctech(a)classiccmp.org
>Subject: Z8000-Fan
>
>Hi Mr. Johnston,
>today I was looking for some Z8000 Fans, to talk about experieces ...
>Are you interested ?
>
>Please, be so kind and send a mail.
>
>Guenter Mewes (www.guentermewes.de)
A friend and I just watched the movie "Seven". I'd seen the movie
before, but I hadn't noticed the VAX-11/780 in the background of the
computerized fingerprint matching scene. It's obviously not running
(no roar in the background) but it was definitely a '780. :-)
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire "She's a cheek pincher. I have scars."
St. Petersburg, FL -Gary Nichols
Mike,
When I get a chance I will try to dig out information
on the Cromemco, 64KZ memory board.
Can not promise I will find anything as we are looking
at 15 years.
Bob
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I have a Kaypro III, 2 Osborne I's and 1 IBM laptop. All three are 10-15
years old and all but 1 of the Osborne's run fine. I would like to sell
them but don't know how to go about it. Could you offer some advice. I
will be inventorying the software this evening and will be able to answer
detail questions tomorrow.
I appreciate your assistance.
James R. Brown
Jrb2000(a)bellsouth.net <mailto:Jrb2000@bellsouth.net> or
jrbrown(a)dveccjax.med.navy.mil <mailto:jrbrown@dveccjax.med.navy.mil>
Phone after PM is 904-269-3984; cell 904-813-8452
Did anyone here use Scripsit on the TRS-80 Model 4 and have the problem of
long documents getting all garbled? That was a wonderful memory that I had
of the "Good Old Days".
Ernest,
I was an Engineer at Apple in the late 70's. I have an original Apple II
that I put together as my lab bench computer. It has a proto-type Language
Card that I designed.( I also have hand written design notes for the board
and a second proto card) The system also contains a proto-type Disk
controller boot card and 16 sector Disk. I also have a proto-type hand
soldered proto-type parallel port that I designed and licensed to Apple. My
library contains a ton of software much of which was used as in-house design
tools, some with documentation. The system works.
Have you any idea how much this may be worth and the best channels to sell
it?
BTW: I live in Woodinville WA and I believe you are in Seattle. Check out my
Bio at: http://www.ipages4u.com/Bio.htm
Robert Paratore
paratore(a)ipages4u.com
206-353-6666
http://www.ipages4u.com
The Sharp PC7000 has a nice light blue display with different backlight
settings...Dim, Standard, and Bright. A contrast wheel helps fine tune
the view. On bright the text is clear and readable.
Robert F. Schaefer:
[power supply, FRU 06H2973, P/N 06H2971 has 3.3V, and an extra connector,
keyed 3 pin with a latch, 22GA black, white, & red]
Do you still have this available? I use my old Aptiva A40 as my network
server here at home. The power supply has been failing for a while but as
long as you don?t bump it, it seems to work OK. However, Christmas must
have done it in. I need a new one. Will be glad to get yours if still
available.
Thanks,
Rick Tuttle
Milwaukee
There are 3 memory expansion slots. When filled with 4MB modules, the max
RAM is 12.6MB.
Three hard drives were offered: two 20MB (type 2) and one 40MB (type 22).
The difference between the 20MBs was the interleave of 1:1 vs 3:1.
The Compaq Service Quick Reference Guide (1992) lists 13 different ROM
revisions, from F.2 to K.1
-----Original Message-----
From: Ethan Dicks [mailto:erd_6502@yahoo.com]
Sent: Wednesday, January 01, 2003 4:51 PM
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Subject: Re: Anyone have any experience replacing a Dallas 1287 with a
12887?
--- Tothwolf <tothwolf(a)concentric.net> wrote:
> Years ago I used to maintain some of these systems...
> The memory modules are located center-front of the "laptop", under a
> metal shield/cover.
Yep. Found those. Full of SRAM, not DRAM, astonishingly enough.
> I don't remember how many slots exist, but I think it can
> hold 3, maybe 4 modules. Modules were available in 1MB and 4MB sizes.
Three. I have three 1MB modules. Didn't know there were 4MB modules.
I'm sure I'll never run across any. For DOS usage, 3.6MB is OK. This
one has Windows 3.0 on it, but I don't need it for what I'm doing.
> The hard drive is a 3.5" form factor IDE drive. Usually, these systems
> had a 20MB or 40MB drive, but it would have been possible to upgrade
> it to 120-210MB too...
Mine has the bog-standard 40MB Connor drive (type 22). Would love to
find a set of replacement ROMs for this so I could use oddball drives,
but for now, I'm stuck with what I've got.
-ethan
<snip>
Toth,
At 10:51 PM 12/31/02 -0600, you wrote:
>On Tue, 31 Dec 2002, Joe wrote:
>
>> Does anyone know of another display that can be substituted for the TIL
>> 306/307? Here is a data sheet for the 306/307 in case you have a
>> question about it, <www.alltronics.com/download/TIL306.pdf>.
>
>I don't know of an exact replacement offhand, but I thought these were
>still in production?
Are they? I think mine are about 25 years old. FWIW I went looking for some at a large local surplus store and found one that I think is prototype. It's built out of clear material instead of red and is marked TIXL306 and is date coded 7204 (almost 31 years old!). I went through several boxs and THOUSANDs of displays and only found one standard 306 and the one prototype.
How many of these displays are you looking for? I
>believe I still have a few in my parts bin...
In addition to the one that I found in the store I need three of them. Mine were in sockets and the dissimilar metal corrosion has eaten off at least one leg off of each of mine.
Joe
>
>-Toth
>
While attempting to revive a Compaq 286/SLT laptop for use as a
front-end for my UP600a programmer, I have found that the battery
on the DS1287 has died (no suprise there). What sucks is that
even after I run the floppy-based setup utility, after a reboot
(not a power-off cycle), the machine forgets what I just set,
both the data and time, and the geometry of the A: drive. Seeing
as how it thinks there's a 5.25" floppy and it's really a 3.5"
high-density drive at the end of the cable, as you can imagine,
it won't reliably read disks.
So... I have ordered a replacement DS12887 since they no longer make/ship
the DS1287. Couple of interesting app notes here:
http://www.maxim-ic.com/appnotes.cfm/appnote_number/562http://www.maxim-ic.com/quick_view2.cfm/qv_pk/2681
What I'm wondering is if anyone on the list has ever replaced a DS1287
with a DS12887. One of the sheets seems to suggest that I'll need
an updated BIOS ROM (clearly not available for a 286 laptop) to drive
the extra stuff associated with the enhanced century rollover.
Alternatively, has anyone here successfully performed surgery on a Dallas
module? I have disconnected the battery from a Mostek 48T02 from a SPARC
and soldered on an external Lithium cell, but the packaging makes it easy
to get access to the battery wires coming down from the top (I even put
the battery on a 9V battery snap so it's easier to replace) I haven't
heard of anyone doing this for the more sealed Dallas modules.
So... anybody else suffer though this?
-ethan
__________________________________________________
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Hi,
I always wanted to play with this processor, I just never got the chance. I have a copy of the Zilog "Microcomputer Components - Data Book Feb 1980" and a copy of "Programming the Z8000" (a Sybec book), but that is about as far as I ever got. I was tinkering with the thought of modding the SIMH emulator to include a Z8000 system, but I don't have any details or experience of any real systems. I then though to invent a fictitious S100 system, based on the existing Altair emulation, but with a Z8000 CPU. This could most likely run a CPM8000 system, with the appropriate BDOS changes. But a lot of work would be need to get a set of compilers/cross compilers for the Z8000, either in tracking them down or writing them. I saw recently that BDS C has been put into the public domain with full source, so there might be some avenue there. Still to generate CPM (or MPM) for a fictitious machine would be a mammoth undertaking, I have all the source code needed, just not the compilers. It would require an 8080/Z80 to Z8000 cross assembler (to avoid rewriting all the assembler), a Z8000 PLM compiler, and a Z8000 C compiler.
Anyway I am declaring myself an unfulfilled fan of the Z8000 processor family.
David Kane
-----Original Message-----
From: G?nter Mewes [mailto:info@mewesbus.de]
Sent: Saturday, 28 December 2002 12:49 AM
To: cctech(a)classiccmp.org
Subject: Z8000-Fan
Hi Mr. Johnston,
today I was looking for some Z8000 Fans, to talk about experieces ...
Are you interested ?
Please, be so kind and send a mail.
Guenter Mewes (www.guentermewes.de)
Reply directly to: <patriots1959(a)yahoo.com>
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Wed, 1 Jan 2003 14:58:34 -0800 (PST)
From: Jason <patriots1959(a)yahoo.com>
To: donate(a)vintage.org
Subject: IBM PCjr
Hello!
I have a working 1980 IBM PCjr, with 51/4 Floppies of software. If you are
interested please reply
Thank you,
Jason
--
Sellam Ismail Vintage Computer Festival
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
International Man of Intrigue and Danger http://www.vintage.org
* Old computing resources for business and academia at www.VintageTech.com *
I was hunting around on ebay, and I found this quite by accident.
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/
eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=4610&item=2085201851 It is an
auction for some reproduction Apple Lisa system disks. The guy
certainly did a good job copying the labels, but I really wonder about
the data on them - the disks he used are high density floppies. I
always thought that if you format a high density floppy for low density
that it will work for a while, then the data will become corrupt due to
the different magnetic properties of the media. I know that this is
true on 5 1/4 media, I used a high density disk in a Commodore 64 by
mistake once, and it didn't work very well. I also remember back when
high density 3 1/2" floppies were pretty expensive, I used to buy low
density disks and drill holes in the other corner so I could reformat
them for high density. It worked just fine, and those disks still work.
Can anyone shed any light on the subject?
Ian Primus
ian_primus(a)yahoo.com
Jules Richardson asks:
> Does anyone know anything about the mechanical fire control computers as used
> in second world war for UK coastal defence batteries?
Do you know who the manufacturer was?
I have started web pages for Ford Instrument,
and Arma Corporation. And I have some information
on them.
I also received this email just last Sunday from
David Mindell, Associate Professor of the History
of Engineering and Manufacturing at MIT:
> ....... You might be interested in my new book,
> Between Human and Machine: Feedback, Control, and
> Computing before Cybernetics (Johns Hopkins, 2002).
> It has a lot of heretofore unkown history of analog
> computing, including the Ford Instrument Company,
> Sperry, Arma, naval fire control, early Bell Labs
> analog electrical computers ("operational amplifiers,")
> Philbrick, etc. Even a Librascope computer, not unlike
> the one on your page, incorporated into the Mark 56
> radar-controlled gun director.
I have not had a chance to see a copy of this book yet.
But you might look for a copy of this book, or email
the author at mindell at mit dot edu and ask him.
--Doug
=========================================
Doug Coward
@ home in Poulsbo, WA
Analog Computer Online Museum and History Center
http://dcoward.best.vwh.net/analog
=========================================
On Dec 31, 13:03, Justin wrote:
> > Oops. Sounds like you have an LK450, LK461 or LK471, not an LK401.
LK401
> > uses a DEC protocol, the others are PS/2-style keyboards. They're not
> > interchangeable, I'm afraid. There should be a label on the underside,
> > with three barcodes, the top barcode being the model number. Does it
say
> > LK401, or something a little different?
>
> You are the only one to say it speaks DEC and not ps/2 though it has a
> ps/2 connector. The circuitboard looks like that of a LK201 when I take
> it apart.
They all look fairly similar. What I meant is that the ones with
PS/2-style plugs normally use PS/2 protocol, and the ones with an RJ11 use
a different, proprietary protocol. My PS/2 ones are at work so I can't
easily check. The only ones I have here are RJ11 LK401s, from VT420s.
> It does have 3 barcodes on the bottom. It isn't made by DEC but in
> Mexico by someone
My LK401s, one UK layout, one German, both say Made in Mexico but they're
still DEC.
> But it ways 5.0 VDC, so I guess it must be ps/2 and not dec style since
> dec has 12 vdc?
Sorry, I can't remember.
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
While trying to find more information about
the book "Between Human and Machine: Feedback, Control,
and Computing before Cybernetics" that I mentioned
earlier, I came across a streaming video clip (little
over an hour long) of professor Mindell discussing
his book:
http://web.mit.edu/mitworld/content/authors/mindell.html
click on "View->>"
A very interesting listen.
Towards the end of the clip he mentions that his
next project will involve the evolution of virtual
environments starting with flight simulators in the
1930, through Apollo, to the internet today. I also noticed
during my search that he is the point of contact about
the Apollo Guidance Computer for the "History of Recent
Science & Technology" web site at MIT - http://hrst.mit.edu/
Anyway, since some people here have been asking for
more information on the AGC, I thought I would mention
that the "History of Recent Science & Technology" web
site has a great library of PDF documents on the AGC at
http://hrst.mit.edu/groups/apollo/bibliography/q-and-a.tcl?topic_id=11&topi…
I glanced through some of the files. Many of them are
quite large.
The first file, "Apollo Guidance and Navigation Lunar
Module Student Study Guide" seems to be a very detailed
manual on the workings of the computer, including a list
of machine instructions.
"Demonstration of the AGC" is a video clip of the computer
being operated.
"Astronauts' Guidance and Navigation Course Notes" is a
introduction to functioning of the whole Apollo Guidance
and Navigation System.
And the file "Luminary 131" (which is a 637MB 1742 page PDF
file that took me 2 hours to download at 90kps!!!) is entitled
"Apollo Luminary 131 (1C) Program Source Code Listing
"19 Dec 1969 NOTE: This listing contains the flight program
for the Lunar Module as created by MIT's Draper Lab for the
Apollo 13/14 moon missions"
And many many more..
--Doug
=========================================
Doug Coward
@ home in Poulsbo, WA
Analog Computer Online Museum and History Center
http://dcoward.best.vwh.net/analog
=========================================
>I
>always thought that if you format a high density floppy for low density
>that it will work for a while, then the data will become corrupt due to
>the different magnetic properties of the media.
In my experience this is true. A long while back, at work we had a client
that kept sending us boxes of blank HD 3.5 disks for use on PCs. We never
needed them (sent all the data va modem), and some at my office kept
taking them and formatting them as 800k in our Macs (SE's and Pluses at
the time). None of them lasted more than a few weeks and a few dozen
read/writes. They generated read/write errors fairly quickly, and always
ended up loosing data. Some wouldn't even take a format.
I can't imagine them being much better for a 400k disk (which was really
a single sided 800k disk as far as Apple was concerned... but don't be
fooled into thinking a 400k disk is safe to format as 800k... I have many
many disks that went bad doing that as well... I can only assume that
only one side of the media was tested as good in manufacturing).
I had even worse experiences with punching a hole in a DD 3.5 disk and
formatting for 1.44 (I even have one of those hole punchers sold for just
this purpose). I think of the bunch that I tried (I think it was a pack
of 25), only something like 5 even took the format, and those 5 failed
almost on their first use... that was a total disaster of an experiment
(I bought the puncher and a pack of disks specifically to avoid the
higher HD cost... it was after this failure that I looked up info on the
disks and learned WHY this wouldn't work, then I was amazed at the fact
that a company sold a punch tool for it... but like PT Barnum says...)
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
This Wang sounds like it's been well taken care of. Email Bob
<james917(a)earthlink.net>.
Bob's original messages (with HTML stripped):
----------
I have a top of the line Wang computer complete with keyboard, monitor,
and daisywheel printer. I have numerous wheels and about a dozen tapes
for the printer. Our local authorities have scheduled a pickup for
obsolete and unwanted electronic and computer equipment on 13 January
2003. My wife insists I get rid of 'all' unused electronic gear, and I
hate to see my Wang in a landfill. Do you know anyone who would want it?
If so, please forward this message. I'm located in Salisbury, MD, and my
e-mail address is <james917(a)earthlink.net>.
----------
Happy New Year, Tom. Re my Wang: I do not find a model number but Wang's
literature calls it a Professional Computer. It was made in 1986 and
bears a serial no. PG3397. Its dimensions are: 26x16x5 inches. The
printer 's dimensions are 22x16x5. It is primarily a word processing
device, and Wang's Integrated Word Processing reference guide calls it
version 2.5. Other literature (Installation guide) refers to PC 300/33C
series. The computer is NOT IBM compatible. I have lots of descriptive
literature and instruction manuals.
Further, If anyone is interested in getting this computer and associated
equipment, and realizing Salisbury is in a somewhat remote area, I would
be willing to meet with a prospective owner in Easton, MD., or, depending
on weather, at one end of the Bay bridge. Further than that I'm unwilling
to drive. I'm going on 87 years of age, and not as adventure-some as I
was several years ago. I hope you can find someone who wants this device.
I had lots of fun with it, and I certainly don't want to see it end up in
a land-fill. Once more, Have a good 2003.
Sincerely,
Bob
----------
For a better new year, all that has to be done is make
pretzels a couple of centimeters thicker. Most all the
world will be delighted.
A war-free year to all.
Lawrence
May you get halfway to heaven, before Satan learns you're
dead or 3/4s of the way to the bar before your wife finds
you've gone out.
lgwalker(a)mts.net
bigwalk_ca(a)yahoo.com
Does anyone know of another display that can be substituted for the TIL 306/307? Here is a data sheet for the 306/307 in case you have a question about it, <www.alltronics.com/download/TIL306.pdf>.
Joe
That is good information to know. I never had a plug to look at and check
the resister inside. I think I was told 880 ohms, but that doesn't appear
to be a standard resister value while 820 ohms is a standard value. Now
that I know the real value to use I will build a real plug instead of just
using some test clips and a trimpot for now.
-Glen
>Here I sit looking at a little black square 3x3 plug, HP p/n
>12991-60002 (stamped in white ink on one side of the hood).
>
>Inside the hood (visible through the hole in the back) there is only a
>1/4W resistor connected to pins 4 and 6, which matches Glen's
>description. Bands are gray, red, brown, gold. Hmm, 820 ohms?
>Measures as 823 ohms on my cheap digital multimeter.
>
>-Frank McConnell
_________________________________________________________________
Protect your PC - get McAfee.com VirusScan Online
http://clinic.mcafee.com/clinic/ibuy/campaign.asp?cid=3963
"Glen S" <glenslick(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
> But someone else on the list told me that something like an 880ohm resister
> across the left most and right most terminals of the middle row of the
> battery connector input would trigger the power supply to power up all of
> the way. That did the trick for the HP 1000 / 2117F that I have.
Here I sit looking at a little black square 3x3 plug, HP p/n
12991-60002 (stamped in white ink on one side of the hood).
Inside the hood (visible through the hole in the back) there is only a
1/4W resistor connected to pins 4 and 6, which matches Glen's
description. Bands are gray, red, brown, gold. Hmm, 820 ohms?
Measures as 823 ohms on my cheap digital multimeter.
-Frank McConnell
Ok, a tad cryptic. <G>
I've found the .pdf version of the HP 1000/M/E/F Engineering Docs, but
every copy I've been able to access is missing section 9 (still can't keep
track of the Roman Numerals they mark the sections with) which covers the
power supply.
There seems something a tad 'twinky' with mine, tho I seem to recall at
one point someone had directed me to a jumper/resistor that needed to be
installed at the 'Battery Input' connector on the rear to wake something
up, but of course now that I'm working on it I can't find anything...
Help???
-jim
---
jimw(a)agora.rdrop.com
The Computer Garage - http://www.rdrop.com/~jimw
>From: "Ethan Dicks" <erd_6502(a)yahoo.com>
>
>
>While attempting to revive a Compaq 286/SLT laptop for use as a
>front-end for my UP600a programmer, I have found that the battery
>on the DS1287 has died (no suprise there). What sucks is that
>even after I run the floppy-based setup utility, after a reboot
>(not a power-off cycle), the machine forgets what I just set,
>both the data and time, and the geometry of the A: drive. Seeing
>as how it thinks there's a 5.25" floppy and it's really a 3.5"
>high-density drive at the end of the cable, as you can imagine,
>it won't reliably read disks.
>
>So... I have ordered a replacement DS12887 since they no longer make/ship
>the DS1287. Couple of interesting app notes here:
>
> http://www.maxim-ic.com/appnotes.cfm/appnote_number/562
> http://www.maxim-ic.com/quick_view2.cfm/qv_pk/2681
>
>What I'm wondering is if anyone on the list has ever replaced a DS1287
>with a DS12887. One of the sheets seems to suggest that I'll need
>an updated BIOS ROM (clearly not available for a 286 laptop) to drive
>the extra stuff associated with the enhanced century rollover.
>
>Alternatively, has anyone here successfully performed surgery on a Dallas
>module? I have disconnected the battery from a Mostek 48T02 from a SPARC
>and soldered on an external Lithium cell, but the packaging makes it easy
>to get access to the battery wires coming down from the top (I even put
>the battery on a 9V battery snap so it's easier to replace) I haven't
>heard of anyone doing this for the more sealed Dallas modules.
>
>So... anybody else suffer though this?
>
>-ethan
>
>
Hi
In a search of the news groups, I found an article by a fellow
that had done surgery on a number of different modules. One thing
that seemed to be constant was that they put the battery in
a number of different locations within these types of devices.
If I was going to hack mine, I first take it to a printed circuit
building shop. These guys usually have a small X-ray machine for
inspecting solder joints. With one of these, you can locate where
the vital parts of the chip are. You can then use a Dremel to grind
into it and connect an external 3V cell.
Dwight
I have two different Lisa machines and both have a jittery display (one
1.2AMP PSU, 1 1.8 AMP PSU). I've followed the instructions in the Sun
Rem. guide to adjust the power supply output. This works immediately
after the adjustment, but the problem gradually comes back over time. I
adjusted both machines around the September timeframe and the jitters
have back on both machines. I'd like to get both of these machines in
top-shape so I can have them running at my New Years party =)
Before I go through the adjustment again, is there anything else I
should be checking? I've also tried adjusting the V.Hold, but this
doesn't seem to make a difference. Maybe I'm not using a precise enough
adjustment?
Thanks,
Jeff
In a message dated 12/30/02 1:13:16 PM Pacific Standard Time,
cisin(a)xenosoft.com writes:
> Don't forget how significant a part of the culture of the history of
> computers is contained in all of those stupid line printer graphic
> pictures of Snoopy ...
Ah Yes, The first thing I printed out with my Litton 1251 when I got it into
my living room in the mid 80s was a Snoopy calendar. All in punched tape.
Nice machine, wished I had kept it.
Paul Pierce has a Litton 1231 in his collection for when he gets his museum
started in PDX.
Punched tape, drum memory, console wi printer, Yum Yum...
Paxton
Astoria, OR
G'day I hope that I am not interrupting anything but I was browsing through
on just this subject of the Amstrad PPC640 Portable. I was given one of
these machines sometime ago and it has been standing in my garage for a
couple of years. I had been buy on other projects and there was no power
unit. Today I plugged it into the cigarette lighter socket of my 81 Volvo
using the adaptor that was available. It worked first time, and requested
Date and Time. Checking with the manual I inserted the System Disk and away
she booted into DOS. I used to run an Amstrad 1640 ECD which was my first
taste of computing back in the dark days of 1988. If you would like me to I
will copy and forward the SYS disk PPC512 / 640 MSDOS V3.30, which apart
>from the Main Op sys also has a programme on it called PPC ORGANISER. This
has a Word Processor / Data Filing / Diary and Calculator. I also found
that this computer has a PC200 Modem inbuilt which uses a programme called
MIRROR 2. Speeds of 75 to 2400 bps are quoted using V21, V22, V22bis and
V23 modes. Unfortunately I do not have the driver disk for the modem.
Anyway should you require any further Info Please contact me.
Dave Lott, Eden NSW Australia
Hi Justin,
I'm interested in your VAX/VMS ref. material; please contact me off list at eusty(a)galaxycorp.com if they are still available, thanks
Vincent
On Dec 31, 5:04, Justin wrote:
> Now I'm working on getting my VAXstation 3100 up and working. IT works
> but my keyboard is shot. I have the LK201, which seems to have a matrix
> fault. about 1/6 of the keys work. :-( I bought a LK401 on ebay and
the
> person said it had the right connector when I asked. I waited too long
> after I got it and found out it didn't in fact have the right connector.
>
> Does anyone know about these? my VAX Station takes the 4 element RJ11
for
> which I have the pinout from the netbsd archive. The LK401 I have though
> has a 6 pin (5 of those are connected) minidin. ( I think its a minidin
> anyway ).
Oops. Sounds like you have an LK450, LK461 or LK471, not an LK401. LK401
uses a DEC protocol, the others are PS/2-style keyboards. They're not
interchangeable, I'm afraid. There should be a label on the underside,
with three barcodes, the top barcode being the model number. Does it say
LK401, or something a little different?
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
Hi,
Does someone have the pinout for a UDA50 ?
I have the two-board-set M7485-YA and M7486 but I don't have the cables
>from the controller and no bulkhead. I'd like to connect a single RA80
and I know about the "uneven number of cables"-rule. Currently the RA80
has two cables connected to the cabinet (mini bulkhead?), from there's
another cable haning loose. Can I make a cable that fits onto this cable
and the UDA50 ? What kind of coaxial cable should I use ?
Anything else I should know or check before powering up the drive ?
Another topic: M8061 (qbus, RLV12 for RL02)
Something strage is happening when I try to boot from or access my RL02....
Configuration:
PDP 11/83, 4mb ram
M8061 and one RL02 (drive0), terminator
When I boot the RL02, the run light simply goes off.
No error message, nothing. the clock signal from the controller should
be there, because i can load the disk, the drive spins up and the Ready
"0" light goes on.
When booting 2.11BSD (from RD54) the same thing happens: the run light
goes off, again no error message. The loaded diskpack contains afaik no
usefull information. Trying another diskpack didn't change anything. The
controller is jumpered as described in the RLV Users Guide and set for
Q22 operation.
The drive & cable are ok, because I can hang it on my 11/44 and boot
RSX11M from another diskpack with it.
Thanks,
lothar.
Hi guys.
I stumbled upon your list while looking for LK401 schematics, and found
that this is the kind of list I was looking for.
My name is Justin, and I like classic computers. We have an interesting
community of technology enthusiasts who hang out at a local coffee shop
here in Houston, TX called Kaveh Kanes.
For a while now I have been trying to get rid of a lot of my old
computers, because I didn't really want to spend more time on them, but it
was hard to part with them. So rather than toss them, I've been getting
them functional and setting them up as internet terminals at the coffee
shop.
A friend, Barrett put his Intel FreeBSD machine up there to start. Now I
have my SparcSTATION 5 exporting an X session from it so people can get
on the web.
Now I'm working on getting my VAXstation 3100 up and working. IT works
but my keyboard is shot. I have the LK201, which seems to have a matrix
fault. about 1/6 of the keys work. :-( I bought a LK401 on ebay and the
person said it had the right connector when I asked. I waited too long
after I got it and found out it didn't in fact have the right connector.
Does anyone know about these? my VAX Station takes the 4 element RJ11 for
which I have the pinout from the netbsd archive. The LK401 I have though
has a 6 pin (5 of those are connected) minidin. ( I think its a minidin
anyway ).
It looks very similar inside, but I don't know what I can connect and I'm
having trouble finding documentation for it.
Well that was a windy introduction, but it tells you a little about
myself, and what I'm trying to do. I just want to share old technology
with people in a way that they can still use and appreciate it at the
coffee shop.
Incidently, I have the complete reference to VAX/VMS in 3 ring binders. I
think its about 17 binders total. If anyone is interested, I'd be OK with
parting with it. IT would be heavy to ship though. 70 lbs?
Next on the list after the VAX is my Amiga 2000. It needs a 68020
processor card first before it can run either AmigaOS 3.9 or NetBSD....
-Justin
> Suggest you head over to usenet and ask on uk.rec.subterranea - the
> folks there are experts on most things concering British bunkers...
Sure - I've actually been out exploring with quite a few of the people who hang
out on that group!
Generally they tend to be keen in the sites for the exploration value though,
but are less interested in how the sites actually operated. After 60 years or
so most of that knowledge has been forgotten, and much of the printed material
of the time has been destroyed.
Having a machine and getting it working again would be one thing. Trying to
find details on something that was melted down at least 40 years ago is easier
said than done! :-)
cheers & have a good New Year's,
Jules
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Everything you'll ever need on one web page
>from News and Sport to Email and Music Charts
http://uk.my.yahoo.com
Jochen writes
> Why? You need pairs of 8 MB or 32 MB FPM parity 72 pin SIMMs.
> Not that uncommon.
Thanks for the useful information about the memory. I have already managed
to locate 1 pair of SIMMs on Ebay. I will continue until maxed out.
>> Now I look at the back of the machine and my main
>> question is what cable do I need to hook up my VT220, or my VT420,
Jochen replies
> Any regular "null-modem" cable should do the job.
I see how to hook up vt220 with db25 f-f null modem cable, but how does that
get vt420 hooked up? It appears to have some kind of RJ connecton in back,
not DB style. Is there a special cable for that?
>
>> or what
>> model monitor with keyboard and mouse is this thing supposed to work with?
> You need a LK201 or LK401 keyboard and a VSxxx mouse. The same keyboard
> (and mouse) as used on the VT[234]xx terminals and the VAXstations.
>
Where do they hook up to? I see on ebay cables with db15 end and 3 bnc,
keyboard and mouse at the other end. I hook this into back of DEC 3000 where
it has tablet port? or do I need two separate cables, one for monitor from
3w3 connector and one from tablet port for keyboard and mouse?
>> In a typical DEC fashion, in the manual they do not mention model numbers of
>> monitor to go with it,
> The video timings for the on board Smart Frame Buffer are:
> 1024 x 786 @ 72 Hz for the 300L
> 1280 x 1024 @ 72 Hz for the 300, 300X, 300LX
> Any sync on green capable multisync monitor can be used. You just need
> a 3W3 video cable.
I have plenty of monitors, but not quite sure what you are saying. Say I
have monitor with 13w3 connector on back, then I need 3w3 to 13w3 cable and
monitor is set? Where do keyboard and mouse come into picture? Special cable
plugging into tablet port (DB15) in back of DEC 3000?
Sorry for so many questions, but I do not know too much about these machines
(as if that is not obvious). Still I hope to soon have OpenVMS or Linux
running on them.
Bradley
Hi,
A little more news on the Ace repair front - I've pulled up the LS367s
and found a load of tracks that were ripped up during resoldering - about
half of these have now been repaired. It looks like the surge went straight
through data line D3 - I've put the ROMs in my EPROM programmer and checked
them against the ROM images Lee Davison sent me and they don't match at all.
In every case, the output value is off by 0x04 - meaning data line D2 is
probably cooked...
I'm also beginning to suspect the video shift register - something isn't
right. Address decoding is fine, the RAMs should have survived being
de-soldered and re-soldered (IME they usually do) and I can't find any
problems with the video timing chain (I assume the fact that I'm getting a
video signal on my TV is good enough proof of this).
It looks like the PCB was laid out with the main CPU section on the left
and the video section on the right with a set of LS367s splitting them up.
This is not as cheap a design as the ZX81 (IMO), but the PCB is complete and
utter crap - the tin plating is stripping off all over the place, solder
resist is cracking and has got thin, raised strips running along its length,
kinda like the veins on a tree leaf.
I've bodged a pair of 2732 ROMs I had in my junk box to fit the sockets
and pinout. The video is reasonably stable, but it's mostly white. I haven't
got any idea why the font RAM and video RAM aren't being loaded, though. Now
if only Farnell still stocked 2532s and 2114s... Thankfully the buffers seem
to have isolated a lot of circuitry in the video circuitry, especially the
timing chain.
The only possible fault condition I can think of is that Jupiter Cantab
designed the Ace around National Semiconductor/Motorola/TI 74LS logic and
the newer Fairchild Semi logic devices I'm using are incompatible with the
existing logic... Stranger and stranger...
Later.
--
Phil.
philpem(a)dsl.pipex.com
http://www.philpem.dsl.pipex.com/
Hi guys.
I stumbled upon your list while looking for LK401 schematics, and found
that this is the kind of list I was looking for.
My name is Justin, and I like classic computers. We have an interesting
community of technology enthusiasts who hang out at a local coffee shop
here in Houston, TX called Kaveh Kanes.
For a while now I have been trying to get rid of a lot of my old
computers, because I didn't really want to spend more time on them, but it
was hard to part with them. So rather than toss them, I've been getting
them functional and setting them up as internet terminals at the coffee
shop.
A friend, Barrett put his Intel FreeBSD machine up there to start. Now I
have my SparcSTATION 5 exporting an X session from it so people can get
on the web.
Now I'm working on getting my VAXstation 3100 up and working. IT works
but my keyboard is shot. I have the LK201, which seems to have a matrix
fault. about 1/6 of the keys work. :-( I bought a LK401 on ebay and the
person said it had the right connector when I asked. I waited too long
after I got it and found out it didn't in fact have the right connector.
Does anyone know about these? my VAX Station takes the 4 element RJ11 for
which I have the pinout from the netbsd archive. The LK401 I have though
has a 6 pin (5 of those are connected) minidin. ( I think its a minidin
anyway ).
It looks very similar inside, but I don't know what I can connect and I'm
having trouble finding documentation for it.
Well that was a windy introduction, but it tells you a little about
myself, and what I'm trying to do. I just want to share old technology
with people in a way that they can still use and appreciate it at the
coffee shop.
Incidently, I have the complete reference to VAX/VMS in 3 ring binders. I
think its about 17 binders total. If anyone is interested, I'd be OK with
parting with it. IT would be heavy to ship though. 70 lbs?
Next on the list after the VAX is my Amiga 2000. It needs a 68020
processor card first before it can run either AmigaOS 3.9 or NetBSD....
-Justin
Ok, so far so good. I've got my wire harness all wired up (I basically
used a good quality 40-pin DIP socket: the signal lines going into one
side and the returns on the other). Nothing fancy required. The reader
is putting out TTL signals so all is good.
One oddity: before hooking anything up, I measured the voltage between the
Apple's ground and the reader's ground. It would start off at a very low
amount of microvolts, climb slowly, then all of a sudden it would shoot
to +5 and then go back down to 0, where the cycle would repeat. The cycle
period was about 5-6 seconds. What the heck is going on?
I tested it out with the indicator signals, i.e. BSY (Busy), HCK (Hopper
Check), MOCK (Motion Check), Error, etc., and the VIA is getting the
signals. I wrote a little program to print out the status bits of the
port that is accepting the signal and ran a batch of cards through and
everything is as expected.
The next step is to wire in the data signals and start to read data. The
VIA gives me two 16-bit ports and an additional 4-bit port. The 4-bit
port is special in that it can generate interrupts, so it will work quite
well for error signals. The problem is I don't know how to access that
port through the card I have. It's a custom 6522 card that I built for a
class on microcomputer interfacing I took a lifetime ago and I can't find
my class notes.
Anyway, I'm in the process of figuring it out. Everything on the card is
accessed through it's I/O addresses, being C080 + (slot * 16). So I have
it in slot 4 which makes all it's I/O available at C0C0-C0CF. I've found
the timer locations and some 16-bit registers. I also found by accident a
timer that generates a RESET interrupt when it elapses--at least that's
the theory I'm going under since the Apple reset itself after I was
playing with the registers. I also believe I remember there being this
feature on the 6522, but I haven't had a chance to read that part of the
docs yet.
One thing I'd like to investigate after I'm done with this is to see if
there are enough inputs on the Apple itself to forgo the necessity of the
6522. The Game I/O port has 7 inputs, if you count the 4 joystick inputs
that can be used as simple TTL inputs, plus the 3 push-button inputs. The
other inputs would be the keyboard. It has 10 Y-inputs and 6 X-inputs,
plus SHIFT and CONTROL. I'm wondering if there would be a way to hook up
the data signals from the reader in a way that the character data from a
card column triggers a key input, which can then be cross-referenced to
determine what data was actually sent from the reader.
Whether this will work depends on how punch card encoding works. From
what I can tell so far, there will only ever be one of the 1-9 numbered
rows punched per column, but there can be any combination of the 0, 11,
and 12 rows. Is this correct?
If so, then there should be enough combinations of inputs on the keyboard
port to allow the data signals to go through that, and then the GAME I/O
has just enough inputs to cover all the status signals (HOPPER CHECK,
MOTION CHECK, ERROR, BUSY, INDEX MARK, and READY).
Sellam Ismail Vintage Computer Festival
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
International Man of Intrigue and Danger http://www.vintage.org
* Old computing resources for business and academia at www.VintageTech.com *
I've been trying to extract the data off of a 20MB XT-IDE drive
(WD-93024X) that was once part of a hard card. It has the software
for my B&C Microsystems UP600 device programmer. Too many swaps
and not enough sleep later, I have inserted the card in backwards
(no bracket and it's an 8-bit card). It's now DOA. The Compaq
Portable II I'm using complains of an I/O ROM error.
So... I can check/replace any of the TTL on the card (74LS13, 74LS14,
74LS244, 74LS30, 73LS260), but the contents of the 2764 are possibly
lost to me. Does anyone have a ROM image or an old XT-IDE hard card?
The P/N on the ROM is 62-000352-031. The assy no. on the PCB is
60-000227-03, the P/N appears to be 61-000347-01.
No smoke got out, but it sure is unhappy.
Thanks for any assistance.
-ethan
__________________________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Mail Plus - Powerful. Affordable. Sign up now.
http://mailplus.yahoo.com
Anybody need an old Telex keyboard? The closest I could come to a
model number was "FC 500" from a label on the underside. More or
less normal pre-PC QWERTY keyboard, with a bunch of editing keys
in the cursor cluster to the right.
It's on a discount table at the MicroCenter in Cambridge, MA. If
you really want this and will pay shipping, I'd be willing to go
back for it. Probably $1.99, but I don't recall seeing it marked.
I picked up a couple of Sun type 5c keyboards while I was there,
since they have the control key where g*d and nature intended
(just left of the "A" key). If you want such a beast for $1.99,
check your local MicroCenter (www.microcenter.com) - matching Sun
mice for $0.99, optical or mechanical. Dunno where they're coming
from, but they've been there since before Thanksgiving.
--S.
>From: "J.C.Wren" <jcwren(a)jcwren.com>
> I have recently acquired a couple of build PC boards that are not
solder
>masked. There is some oxidation, ranging from minimal to mild (mild being
>the not quite green, but a very hard oxide, as if the tin had reacted with
>something else). Anyone got any good ideas on cleaning these? I'd like
>something non-submersible, since one of the boards contains keyswitches.
>
> I have plenty of experience cleaning unbuilt boards. Normally, I'd
just
>hit them with some super fine steel wool, or buff them with 20lb paper.
And
>I've repaired boards, but usually to get them working, not to restore their
>aesthetic appeal.
>
> I've considered using a baking soda solution and a stiff bristle
brush.
>This should neutralize any corrisive elements, and the baking soda might be
>abrasive enough to remove the oxides without damaging the board. It would
>wash off easily enough with water, and I could protect the switches during
>that process.
Hi
Baking soda assumes that it is acid that caused the corrosion.
If it was caused by leakage from NiCads, you'll need to use
something like vinegar to neutralize it.
You might try getting a fiber glass brush from a welding shop.
These are sometimes used to clean aluminum.
Sometimes it isn't the copper that is oxidized. They put a
layer of nickel between the copper and solder on most PC boards.
It may be nickel oxides ( bluish green ).
If there is any kind of salts ( neutral ) you'll still have
electrolytic corrosion. You need to make sure that it is well
cleaned before you are done, regardless of what you use.
Dwight
>
> Anyone got any ideas or standard procedures for this kind of thing?
>
> --JOhn
>
>
>
Ok, I've kinda figured out the control lines on the 6522.
First of all, I've got them triggering a flag in the IFR whenever there
is a state change on any control pin from a ground to either floating or
+5V.
For example, CB1 is plugged into ground. I reset the IFR (so no flags
are set). I remove the ground from CB1. CB1's flag in the IFR gets set.
I reset that flag. If I plug CB1 into +5V, I get no flag. If I unplug
CB1 from +5V, I get no flag. If I plug CB1 back into ground, I get a
flag.
Why are the flags being set only when one of the control lines no longer
senses ground? I tried playing with the PCR to see if setting whether the
control pins are active positive edge or active negative edge changes this
behavior but it doesn't. I can work with this the way it is: I'm
basically tracking state changes on the control pins, which is fine for
my purposes since the reader will go from TTL false to TTL true if there
is an error, and back to TTL false when the error gets cleared. But I
want to know how the behavior of the control lines is set.
Now, I seem to have a problem with CA1. If I have CA1 connected to
ground, it's stable. As soon as I remove it from ground and it's
floating, CA1's state starts to fluctuate wildly for a little over 2
seconds. It's flag in the IFR keeps triggering over and over. If, right
after I remove it from ground and it starts fluctuation, I plug it back
into ground, it stabalizes (it stops changing states). As soon as I
remove it again, it fluctuates wildly.
Is CA1 tied to one of the 16-bit timers? It sure seems like it. The docs
say something about being able to make one of the control lines trigger
off a timer. Am I triggering the shift register somehow?
What in tarnations is going on?
Sellam Ismail Vintage Computer Festival
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
International Man of Intrigue and Danger http://www.vintage.org
* Old computing resources for business and academia at www.VintageTech.com *
>From: "Sellam Ismail" <foo(a)siconic.com>
>
>Ok, I've kinda figured out the control lines on the 6522.
>
>First of all, I've got them triggering a flag in the IFR whenever there
>is a state change on any control pin from a ground to either floating or
>+5V.
>
>For example, CB1 is plugged into ground. I reset the IFR (so no flags
>are set). I remove the ground from CB1. CB1's flag in the IFR gets set.
>I reset that flag. If I plug CB1 into +5V, I get no flag. If I unplug
>CB1 from +5V, I get no flag. If I plug CB1 back into ground, I get a
>flag.
>
>Why are the flags being set only when one of the control lines no longer
>senses ground? I tried playing with the PCR to see if setting whether the
>control pins are active positive edge or active negative edge changes this
>behavior but it doesn't. I can work with this the way it is: I'm
>basically tracking state changes on the control pins, which is fine for
>my purposes since the reader will go from TTL false to TTL true if there
>is an error, and back to TTL false when the error gets cleared. But I
>want to know how the behavior of the control lines is set.
>
>Now, I seem to have a problem with CA1. If I have CA1 connected to
>ground, it's stable. As soon as I remove it from ground and it's
>floating, CA1's state starts to fluctuate wildly for a little over 2
>seconds. It's flag in the IFR keeps triggering over and over. If, right
>after I remove it from ground and it starts fluctuation, I plug it back
>into ground, it stabalizes (it stops changing states). As soon as I
>remove it again, it fluctuates wildly.
>
>Is CA1 tied to one of the 16-bit timers? It sure seems like it. The docs
>say something about being able to make one of the control lines trigger
>off a timer. Am I triggering the shift register somehow?
Hi
What is the weird behavior? I haven't seen anything I wouldn't
have expected.
Dwight
>
>What in tarnations is going on?
>
>Sellam Ismail Vintage Computer Festival
>------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>International Man of Intrigue and Danger http://www.vintage.org
>
> * Old computing resources for business and academia at www.VintageTech.com *
>
>
Sellam Ismail <foo(a)siconic.com> wrote:
> 80 characters x 11 bits = 880 bits / 9600 bps = .092 seconds. Should be
> no problem. I'll see what the manual says about timing between card
> reads.
Except that, if you want to read binary cards (trust me, you will --
those binary cards are contain boot and other code for these
machines), you need to do all 12 rows. 80 columns x 12 rows = 960
bits / 8 bits per byte = 120 bytes per record.
OK, now as for sending that over a serial line, remember that serial
I/O adds framing information , so it becomes 10 bits per byte supposing
8 data bits, no parity, 1 start and 1 stop bit. So 1200 bits at 9600
bps = 0.125 second. You probably want to do at least a simple
checksum of the data for each record and send that too (so the
receiver can verify, send ack or nak, and the sender can retransmit on
receipt of nak or just non-receipt of ack).
You've got RAM in the Apple, use it as a buffer between the card
reader and the serial port. 16KB would hold 136 full card images,
which you might think would be more than enough time to tell the
reader to stop picking cards and actually have it stop. So, when the
buffer's fullness gets above some threshold, stop picking cards until
it gets below some lower threshold.
You may be able to do some cheap buffer- and serial-time savings by
either run-length encoding or just keeping a record length and not
storing or sending trailing blank (unpunched) columns. Depends on
your data. I think I would go for this last.
-Frank McConnell
On Dec 30, 13:57, John Lawson wrote:
> On Mon, 30 Dec 2002, Sellam Ismail wrote:
>
> > Now, I seem to have a problem with CA1. If I have CA1 connected to
> > ground, it's stable. As soon as I remove it from ground and it's
> > floating, CA1's state starts to fluctuate wildly for a little over 2
> > seconds.
>
> Try tieing it to +5 via a 10K resistor, so it's either solidly a 0 or
> solidly a 1. Many digital chips get cranky when their pins 'float'.
Yes. Worst example I came across was a CMOS circuit which was designed by
an "expert". It worked on a breadboard, but when transferred to the final
PCB it misbehaved and eventually died of "dead chip". It turned out that a
couple of unused inputs were left unconnected and floating. On the
breadboard, that wasn't a problem, because it was dirty and there was
enough leakage (a hundred megohms or so) to keep them in a reasonable and
constant state. But the PCB was waterproofed, and they really did float,
eventually leading to excess dissipation in the chip, and destruction of
one of the gates. The reason is that a CMOS gate is basically two MOS
transistor switches, one connecting the output to the power rail, and the
other connecting it to ground. If the input floats halfway between logic
levels, both turn on (at least, in older devices), and the current destroys
one of the MOS transistors.
Another example was a TTL circuit that ran fine at low to medium
frequencies, but not at several megahertz. Floating input again; that sort
of thing has a drastic effect on the speed of the gate.
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
On Dec 30, 10:30, Sellam Ismail wrote:
>
> Ok, I've kinda figured out the control lines on the 6522.
>
> First of all, I've got them triggering a flag in the IFR whenever there
> is a state change on any control pin from a ground to either floating or
> +5V.
>
> For example, CB1 is plugged into ground. I reset the IFR (so no flags
> are set). I remove the ground from CB1. CB1's flag in the IFR gets set.
> I reset that flag. If I plug CB1 into +5V, I get no flag. If I unplug
> CB1 from +5V, I get no flag. If I plug CB1 back into ground, I get a
> flag.
You're sensing noise. The inputs are not level-sensitive, they're
edge-triggered. If you have the PCR set to zero (which is the default
after a reset), CB1's flag will set whenever CB1 sees a falling edge.
You're probably generating small noise spikes when you remove the ground
(this is a bit like key bounce) or picking up stray current (the inside of
an Apple is a pretty noisy place, electrically speaking). This would
explain why the flag gets set when you initially remove the ground from
CB1, and then again when you ground it again. Without the noise, it
wouldn't set the flag when you remove the ground, only when you restore it.
> Why are the flags being set only when one of the control lines no longer
> senses ground? I tried playing with the PCR to see if setting whether
the
> control pins are active positive edge or active negative edge changes
this
> behavior but it doesn't.
Actually it does, but I bet you've not got pullups or pulldowns on the
pins, and you're seeing noise. These pins are fairly high impedance. And
because the inputs are edge-sensitive, the flag gets set not just because
it's low (otherwise it would get set if it were low when you configure it,
and you'd not be able to clear the flag) but because it *changes state* to
become low.
> I can work with this the way it is: I'm
> basically tracking state changes on the control pins, which is fine for
> my purposes since the reader will go from TTL false to TTL true if there
> is an error, and back to TTL false when the error gets cleared. But I
> want to know how the behavior of the control lines is set.
See my post from a few minutes ago.
> Now, I seem to have a problem with CA1. If I have CA1 connected to
> ground, it's stable. As soon as I remove it from ground and it's
> floating, CA1's state starts to fluctuate wildly for a little over 2
> seconds. It's flag in the IFR keeps triggering over and over. If, right
> after I remove it from ground and it starts fluctuation, I plug it back
> into ground, it stabalizes (it stops changing states). As soon as I
> remove it again, it fluctuates wildly.
Noise. Floating inputs are A Bad Thing.
> Is CA1 tied to one of the 16-bit timers? It sure seems like it. The
docs
> say something about being able to make one of the control lines trigger
> off a timer. Am I triggering the shift register somehow?
>
> What in tarnations is going on?
Did I mention noise? :-)
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
Hi,
I've just had my disk holding my main mailbox fail on me (Yet another
Fujitsu MPG fails, that's three in as many months.) Could Adrian and Jim
please get back in touch with me, I've lost everything :'(
Tim
On Dec 30, 8:02, Sellam Ismail wrote:
> On Mon, 30 Dec 2002 pete(a)dunnington.u-net.com wrote:
> > That's an odd VIA. You mean a single 6522, right?
> Sorry, it was a typo. I meant two 8-bit ports.
Ah, I suspected it might be.
> This is starting to make sense.
>
> But alll the documenation I've read so far indicates that the function of
> the CA and CB lines is controlled by the PCR (Peripheral Control
> Register). I'll go poke a 0 into the IER and then see if I can get bits
> in the IFR to toggle by putting +5 on the CA1, CA2, CB1 or CB2 pins.
The easiest way to set it up to play with, is first to pull each of CA1,
CA2, CB1, and CB2 to +5V through four suitable resistors (anything from 1k
to 100k will do for this). Then write 0x00 into the PCR, which makes the
four handshake lines operate as independant inputs, with negative edge
triggering. Write 0x7F into the IER to disable all the interrupts (so the
Apple doesn't do any more resets), and 0x7F into the IFR to make sure it's
cleared. Then keep polling the IFR while you ground one or more of the
handshake pins. Look for any non-zero value. The relevant bits in the IFR
should become set, according to which line(s) you ground. Note that this
won't ever set bit 7 (MSB) of the IFR, because that only happens if
interrupts are enabled, unfortunately. Also remember you have to manually
clear the flags once they're set.
If you want to use positive-going edges instead of negative-going, use
pull-down resistors (don't rely on an unconnected input being low, it might
float to any value) and set 0x55 in the PCR.
If you are keen to use bit 7 in the IFR as a flag indicating "any input",
stick an RTI instruction on the end of your code, and store the address of
that RTI at IRQLOC ($03FE) first. That will prevent the interrupts
upsetting the Apple. Alternatively, have the Apple execute an SEI
instruction (0x78, sets the IRQ mask in the status register, to disable
interrupts). Then write 0x64 into the IER to disable all the interrupts
except from the handshake lines, and then write 0x9B into the IER to ensure
all the handshake interrupts really are enabled (the default state, after a
chip reset, is all disabled).
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
On Dec 28, 19:53, Sellam Ismail wrote:
> The next step is to wire in the data signals and start to read data. The
> VIA gives me two 16-bit ports and an additional 4-bit port.
That's an odd VIA. You mean a single 6522, right? It has two
bidirectional 8-bit ports, each of which has 2 associated handshake lines.
Each of the bidirection lines can be set to be an input or an output, so
it might seem like you have 16 possible inputs and 16 possible outputs --
but you only have 16 connections (plus 4 handshake).
> Anyway, I'm in the process of figuring it out. Everything on the card is
> accessed through it's I/O addresses, being C080 + (slot * 16). So I have
> it in slot 4 which makes all it's I/O available at C0C0-C0CF. I've found
> the timer locations and some 16-bit registers.
The only 16-bit parts of a 6522 are the timers. Timer 1 is a 16-bit
counter accessed as two adjacent 8-bit bytes, and two 8-bit latches (used
to reload it when it counts down to zero). Timer 2 is a 16-bit counter
accessed as two adjacent 8-bit bytes, without latches (so useful only for
counting pulses, or as a one-shot interval timer).
> I also found by accident a
> timer that generates a RESET interrupt when it elapses--at least that's
> the theory I'm going under since the Apple reset itself after I was
> playing with the registers. I also believe I remember there being this
> feature on the 6522, but I haven't had a chance to read that part of the
> docs yet.
A 6522 doesn't have any pin that would normally go to the RESET line, but
it does have an interrupt output. If you set something in register 14 (the
Interrupt Enable Register) and a timer timed out, or you created a
transition on one of the handshake lines, the 6522 would generate an
interrupt. The interrupts on a standard Apple ][, ][+ or //e aren't used
-- it does all normal operations by polling, which is why it's so slow for
some things -- and an interrupt causes the processor to jump to a location
in the ROM. Just where depends on the ROM, but in an original Monitor ROM
or an Autostart ROM, it ends up either going directly to the same routine
as BRK does (which will perform the equivalent of a soft reset) or jumps
through a vector which you're supposed to set up first. If you've not
preset that, I think it ends up in the BRK routine (it certainly does in an
Autostart ROM).
> One thing I'd like to investigate after I'm done with this is to see if
> there are enough inputs on the Apple itself to forgo the necessity of the
> 6522. The Game I/O port has 7 inputs, if you count the 4 joystick inputs
> that can be used as simple TTL inputs, plus the 3 push-button inputs.
The
> other inputs would be the keyboard. It has 10 Y-inputs and 6 X-inputs,
> plus SHIFT and CONTROL.
Er, not exactly. As Tony pointed out, the keyboard includes a decoder
(called a ROM in the manual), and the key matrix is decoded by scanning.
Either the X or Y lines are outputs (the manual doesn't say which, but
IIRC it's the Y lines). Only SHIFT, CTRL, and SHIFT LOCK are plain inputs,
and they only serve to modify the 7-bit code sent to the motherboard.
> If so, then there should be enough combinations of inputs on the keyboard
> port to allow the data signals to go through that, and then the GAME I/O
> has just enough inputs to cover all the status signals (HOPPER CHECK,
> MOTION CHECK, ERROR, BUSY, INDEX MARK, and READY).
I would just use the 6522. You need 12 data, plus 6 status listed above.
Is there also a strobe of some sort (or is that READY?)? 8 lines on port
A, plus 4 on port B for the data, CA1 for the READY or strobe, and some
mixture of the remaining 4 data lines and the other three handshake lines
should do it. Don't bother with interrupts to start with. Leave the IER
all zeros, and just poll the IFR to look for the flag for CA1. Or just
poll it looking for a negative number (which means bit 7 is set, which
means one of the other flags is also set).
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
I'm having a heck of a time figuring out how to use the CA and CB ports on
the 6522 as inputs. From the documentation I have, it seems the CA port
can be used for one TTL input, and CB can be used as two.
But how do you set them up as such? The documentation is confusing.
I'll sleep on it and see if either a) I wake up refreshed and figure it
out or b) wake up and find a nice helpful message waiting here ;)
Sellam Ismail Vintage Computer Festival
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
International Man of Intrigue and Danger http://www.vintage.org
* Old computing resources for business and academia at www.VintageTech.com *
On Dec 29, 22:06, R. D. Davis wrote:
> While thinking about racks to use for mounting my PDP-11/44
> components, as well as other equipment from test equipment to audio
> and synth equipment, something just occured to me: why bother with
> hunting down steel racks when some 2x4s and lag bolts may suffice just
> as well? I was thinking that one can just run 2x4s from the basement
> floor up to the heavy wooden rafters, attach them to the rafters, and
> then add horizontal supports at the bottom to space the vertical 2x4s
> apart properly. Any thoughts on this? I guess the museum-type
> equipment purists won't like the idea, but it would be a cheap and
> functional solution for many of us. :-) Has anyone else here tried
> this?
Not exactly this, but in addition to (and adjacent to) my racks, I have
some adjustable shelving which uses cantilever brackets, fitted to upright
rails that are screwed to the 2"x4" vertical "studs" in the wall. The
brackets are 610mm (about 24") long and so the shelves are 750mm (~30")
deep. The brackets and rails are Spur "Steel-Lok" type and each pair of
brackets is rated to hold 75kg (175lb). I tested their security by
climbing up them before I entrusted my precious computers and VR14 to them,
so I'm sure a 2x4 frame will hold any reasonable amount of rackmount
equipment *providing* you have appropriate fixings.
http://www.spurshelving.com/html/tech/steel.htm will show you the stuff I
used, I'm sure there's something similar in the States. I used a baby
version of the same stuff for shelves on a couple of steel-framed trolleys.
HOWEVER, the real utility of a rack is that you can mount things on rails
and slide them out whilst they're still connected; and that you can adjust
the position of things as more interesting equipment comes along (thanks,
James! [1]).
In fact, it's very hard to work on some things unless you can slide them
out part-way, like my PDP-8/E (which is slightly poorly ATM, but that's
another story) or most of my PDP-11s.
More than that, it's practically impossible to *use* certain things unless
you can slide them out -- you need to slide an RL01/RL02 halfway out of the
rack to change the disk pack, for example. Those b***s are heavy, and you
really do want to use the proper rails. With the ball-bearing rails,
changing an RL02 pack is an operation you can do without thinking about it;
without, it becomes a "put it off until next week" job.
The first catch is that rails and other (static) rackmount equipment are
intended to fit precisely-spaced holes. Despite what some people think,
they're neither random nor equally spaced (forgive me if you know this).
They're in groups of three with one hole in the centre and one each 5/8"
above and below, leaving 1/4" between the centre of the upper (or lower)
hole and the start of the next U. In other words, the spacing goes 5/8",
5/8", 1/2", 5/8", 5/8", 1/2", ... and 1 rack unit (1U) is 1_3/4".
American-style racks (RETMA?) use round holes, sized to be a good clearance
for No.10 machine screws (or M5 m/screws) and are used with Tinnerman nuts.
European racks use square holes, to which you fit cage nuts (usually M6
but sometimes M5), and the centre hole of each 1U group has, by convention,
a little notch at the side, so it's easy to see where the centre of each 1U
space is.
For that reason alone, it would be much easier to buy the upright flanges
which have the holes pre-punched in the right places. They look like
overgrown Dexion angle, or steel angle with a lot of holes (front face) and
slots (side, for mounting to the uprights). You can get them here in sizes
>from 3U to 48U (common sizes are 3U, 6U, 12U, 18U, 32U, 42U, 48U). Price
depends on quality (ie, strength) but they're not expensive. I bought a
24U strip and cut it up for my "hub of the universe" wiring rack. That's a
14" deep 6U high frame with sides of 1" square steel tube and flat-strip
cross members at the back, mounted over the workshop door. It holds my
main Ethernet switch, and several patch panels for UTP, coax, and fibre.
Another reason to buy the proper uprights is that some rails, notably those
for an RX02, PDP-8/E, and various other devices, fit to the back surface of
the flange, not the front (as most "static" equipment does). If your
wooden uprights are the right distance apart to directly fit the sort of
equipment that has mounting "ears", ie screwing the ears straight into the
front of the wood, you'll never be able to fit most types of slide rails,
unless you do a bit of woodwork to provide a rebate. Ditto for most
shelves, both static and sliding, except cantilever shelves (which fit from
the front surface only, but cost more than ordinary ones).
> Lastly, has anyone on this list tried retrofitting non-rack-mount
> equipment into racks? E.g., welding (or "JB Weld"ing) rack-mount tabs
> onto systems like PCs and Kaypros, as well as making rack-mountable
> shelves to hold the Macintoshes, etc.?
Rackmount shelves are good for that -- just make sure you have enough, or
you end up with systems on top of each other again. Cantilever shelves are
particularly good because you can always get at the mounting screws, which
are only on the front. Conventional shelves are much cheaper but you need
to be able to get your hand and screwdriver into the gap between the
shelves to reach the screws on the underside of the shelf you're moving --
oh, and BTW they screw into the sides, which will be a little awkward with
big woodscrews.
We use lots of rackmount shelves at work, for PCs (mostly running Linux)
and Sparcs that weren't designed to rackmount.
Otherwise, just screw a bracket onto each side of the case. The screws
needn't be very large, as most of the forces are in shear. Self-tapping
screws will do for most metal cases, machine screws with washers and nuts
on the inside for plastic. I wouldn't weld things. Cases are thin,
usually zinc plated (nasty fumes), and hard to weld. I certainly wouldn't
use epoxy or anything like that. If you ever want to remove the brackets,
two or three small holes in each side is much better than the mess a broken
weld or epoxy will leave.
A few other thoughts:
As someone else pointed out, having the side panels makes a big difference
to the sound level. It might also make a big difference to the airflow,
though, which is why proper racks have fans of their own, normally in the
top :-)
It's obvious that the width between the uprights is important, but just in
case you're wondering, the depth is not (much). A lot of things are
front-fixing-only, and most rails are adjustable. Anyway, most flanges
have slots rather than holes for mounting, so some adjustment is possible.
I can only think of two items where the exact depth matters: my SGI
Origin 2000 (which has two slightly superfluous brackets at the back), and
an RL01/2 drive, where the shipping bracket is supposed to be fitted to the
rear flange (which therefore has to be a particular distance from the front
flange). Nevertheless, there are standard depths, like 600mm, 800mm, and
950mm (in Europe) but they're more a matter of convenience. FYI, a
standard DEC rack measures exactly 25" from front surface of front flange
to back surface of back flange.
To be honest, I think you'd be better off finding a secondhand rack. It
will already have all the right holes, possibly the side panels, and if it
has casters, it might be more versatile than a fixed frame. Providing the
casters are strong enough to take the total weight (ie not intended to be
supplemented or replaced by jacking-screw feet) it's useful to be able to
move a rack a small amount from time to time. Don't forget you need access
to the back as well as the front!
[1] James is a list member who has occasionally helped me shuffle a
PDP-11/40 up and down a rack. No need to remove the power supply if he's
around :-)
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
Hi,
>> Does anyone know anything about the mechanical fire control computers
>> as used in second world war for UK coastal defence batteries?
>
> You might try posting this question to the guys that know, on the
> coastal-defense mail list (yes, there is a list for geeks of all kinds).
> I can post the question to the list, if you wish.
hey, that'd be much appreciated if you can forward my posting on my behalf.
It's probably worth me joining at some point anyway - I've visited most of the
coastal defence sites in the UK, but those have all been stripped of nearly all
metal. The site in New Zealand seems quite unique just because it is largely
intact - power generation and hydraulics are all still present and we hope to
have engine room systems running again one day. The 9.2" guns went for scrap
years ago, but there are still a few examples left around the world. Having a
gun moving around on the hillside under its own power would be pretty cool!
> Getting any information or artifacts will be very difficult - about as
> close to impossible as you can get. The reason for this is post-war, the
> fire control computers were of little use (they do exactly one function) and
> have large scrap values (for example, a Mk IV TDC has about a _pound_ of
> gold inside). When the mechanisms were scrapped, the manuals were simply
> thrown away.
that is a lot of gold! A lot of other documentation relating to the site has
survived in city archives, including manuals, site plans, the fortress record
book etc. but for some reason information relating to the fire control systems
vanished - almost as though someone had a paranoia attack and purposely
destroyed it. There's a rumour that there is one photo of the computer
somewhere - I'm trying to trace its wherabouts at the moment.
>> It's possible that the unit shared a lot of commonality with ship-based
>> systems, in some cut-down form or other, but I haven't yet located anyone
>> who can confirm this.
>
> Possibly. They probably would be cut down, as there are less variables to
> deal with - not being on a ship means that you can eliminate the stable
> element and gyrocompass inputs.
yes, that's what I figured. Logically there are common elements between the
systems, and probably enough to justify sharing of parts. Of course, whether
this sort of foresight happened or whether the Army took the Navy's equipment
and simply trimmed redundant functionality out is debatable! They may well have
been completely different systems...
(the 9.2" guns were ex-navy and I believe the hydraulic systems were shared
too, but of course that doesn't mean to say that fire control systems were at
all related)
> I am very interested in these things (I think the fire control collection
> now outweighs the computer collection).
literally, I imagine - those mechanical systems must be pretty heavy :-)
cheers
Jules
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Everything you'll ever need on one web page
>from News and Sport to Email and Music Charts
http://uk.my.yahoo.com
>Message: 3
>Date: Fri, 27 Dec 2002 20:46:01 -0600
>Subject: DEC 3000 300X/300
>From: Bradley Slavik <fire(a)dls.net>
>To: <cctalk(a)classiccmp.org>
>Reply-To: cctech(a)classiccmp.org
>
>I finally am almost within reach of getting my DEC 3000 300 working. A few
>years ago I foolishly purchased it without memory, thinking it would be a
>simple matter to inexpensively pick up some memory later. How wrong I was.
>Now I have purchased a DEC 3000 300X with 160MB memory with the intention of
>lending 32MB to the 300.
>
My 300LX uses 8 or 32 mb 72 pin FPM-DIMM's (with Parity, that's important!).
Did not try 16 or 64 mb modules, anyone else?
>Now I look at the back of the machine and my main
>question is what cable do I need to hook up my VT220, or my VT420, or what
>model monitor with keyboard and mouse is this thing supposed to work with?
>
>In a typical DEC fashion, in the manual they do not mention model numbers of
>monitor to go with it, but there are rough instructions that I may be able
>to follow to get dumb terminal console working. I would ideally like to have
>real monitor on 300X,
Read the manual at page 1-3 for supported monitors.
I think you are aware of Keyboard-mouse Cable 17-02640-01 and the DEC-protocol
of the mouse. Otherwise see:
http://www.netclique.net/oldmouse/Hawley/DEC-VAX.html or
http://www.cs.utk.edu/~shuford/terminal/dec_mouse_news.txthttp://groups.google.com/groups?q=author:mzthompson%40aol.com&hl=de&lr
=lang_en&ie=UTF-8&selm=20021016091543.01470.00001267%40mb-mb.aol.com&rnum=4 (on
one line).
>
>VT420 on 300, leaving my VT220 free for my MicroVax II.
>
Any ascii-terminal will work, use 9600 baud setting. I just tried to connect a
VT220 to my 300LX to the 25 pole D-connector (plug 4 on page 3-6) and was
successful with a BC22A-25 cable. (Dont forget to detach the keyboard from
300LX!) It takes about 1-2 minutes before the first text appears to the serial
terminal. Output comes just after the 3-tone melody. Build-in CRT-output comes
much faster.
I have a VR297-DA, and tried to connect it to the 300LX to no success. (There
is some picture and synchronisation, but the information appears 5 times
adjacent, and is not readable.) Either this monitor does not match the 300LX or
the video-setup of the internal adapter has the wrong parameters. Anyone some
clues about this? To what workstation will the VR297-DA fit?
I hope this helps you.
Frank Arnold
Tonight while looking for a wall wart for an old Hayes modem, I
discovered something that I didn't know I had: some sort of monitor
cable adapter. At one end is a Sun workstation style monitor
connector from which four cables are connected to BNC connectors with
reg, green, blue and white labels. Does anyone on this group knows if
it will work with an HP (Sony) 98789A fixed frequency monitor which
has R, G, B and HD and VD sync connectors (can I use just one of these
syncs?). I'd hook it up to see if it works without asking, but I'd
prefer not to have to carry the monitor down to the basement if it
isn't going to work. :-)
--
Copyright (C) 2002 R. D. Davis The difference between humans & other animals:
All Rights Reserved an unnatural belief that we're above Nature &
rdd(a)rddavis.org 410-744-4900 her other creatures, using dogma to justify such
http://www.rddavis.org beliefs and to justify much human cruelty.
Hi,
A bit (er, lot!) of a long shot this, but it's probably vaguely on-topic...
Does anyone know anything about the mechanical fire control computers as used
in second world war for UK coastal defence batteries? I did some restoration
work out in New Zealand earlier in the year on a wartime coastal battery which
was built to a British design, and used British systems. Unfortunately all
information on 'out' plotting-room computer mysteriously vanished in the
1950's, and the unit itself sadly was cut up for scrap value many years ago.
It'd be nice to get some information on possible units though just for
something to show on site open days.
It's possible that the unit shared a lot of commonality with ship-based
systems, in some cut-down form or other, but I haven't yet located anyone who
can confirm this.
I seem to recall a few posts about US equivalent systems a few years back, so
there's probably a few current list members who are interested in this sort of
system despite the units being non-electronic in nature!
cheers,
Jules
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Everything you'll ever need on one web page
>from News and Sport to Email and Music Charts
http://uk.my.yahoo.com
Spotted on the ti99 list on YahooGroups.
----- Forwarded message -----
X-Apparently-To: ti99-4a{{{at}}}yahoogroups.com
To: ti99-4a{{{at}}}yahoogroups.com
Message-id: <200212292023.NAA07743(a)aztec2.asu.edu>
X-eGroups-From: dlormand{{{at}}}aztec.asu.edu (DAVID L. ORMAND)
Date: Sun, 29 Dec 2002 13:23:55 -0700 (MST)
Subject: [ti-99/4a] TMS9900 Lives!
Just thought you guys would get a charge out of this:
Regardless of what anyone else thinks, the Army thinks we
will be at war with Iraq imminently. So the old TOW team
has been busy through the Christmas break.
And I got to play with 9989 assembly again! Joy!
Furthermore, since the old development tools don't seem to
be working anymore (VAX and HP9000), I had to drag in one
of my TI-99/4A systems to do module testing! Much to the
amusement of the rest of the team!
The old dog still lives!
For users/owners of TI-99/4A and compatibles everywhere!
To Unsubscribe, send a blank message to: ti99-4a-unsubscribe{{{at}}}eGroups.com
----- End of forwarded message -----
--
----------------------------- personal page: http://www.armory.com/~spectre/ --
Cameron Kaiser, Point Loma Nazarene University * ckaiser(a)stockholm.ptloma.edu
-- Less talk, more synthohol. -- Lt. Worf, Star Trek: TNG ---------------------
All right. College is over, and I'm starting to map out plans for my Machine
Room of Ultimate Power (Consumption). Trouble is, my 850 sq ft house is not
much bigger than an apartment. I've found that vertical storage is my friend
here, and I want to use as much of that as I can. I've got this Kennedy 9300
tape transport. It's big like a DEC TE16 and has vacuum columns and such. It
will live at the top of a rack. Unfortunately...um...I've never actually
*used* one of these big tape drives, or any tape drive for that matter, and
I can find zilch docs on it. Are there going to be problems with sticking
anything else (storage or processor) under it? Specifically, would
vibrations from the 9300 cause problems (e.g. alignment) with a disk drive
(e.g. RK05) mounted below it? Could vibrations cause problems (e.g. cards
working themselves out of the backplane) with a processor (e.g. 11/34)?
--
Jeffrey Sharp
Gidday Tony,
you may wish to check my WEBSITE ! I have the (almost) complete SET
of
Service Manuals for this hardware.
Cheers.
Alan.
Alan Devlin.
RF RESALE... where Honesty & Integrity are paramount !
Melbourne, Australia.
WEB PAGE URL http://www.users.bigpond.com/alandevlin/index.html
manual(s) for Fluke 9010 Troubleshooter 8080 and 8085 pods?
Tony Eros cctech(a)classiccmp.org
Sun Oct 13 18:59:32 2002
Previous message: manual(s) for Fluke 9010 Troubleshooter 8080 and 8085 pods?
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>As for a second RX01, I cannot help you. On the 86x0 you have a command
to say that you really want >to play with a second RL02 instead of the
standard one, but it's not very easy to use, and not
>really ment for customers to play with. Then again, there isn't even a
DIR command on the 86x0
>console (nor a command file to do the same).
I should read those 8600 manuals but, not having an actual
8600, I lack the incentive :-) On the 11/780 that I
used briefly many years ago, you could get to the console
devices by doing CONNECT CONSOLE within SYSGEN and then
the CSA0: and CSA1: devices were available (this is
under VMS). The EXCHANGE utility could then get to
the RT-11 formatted data. Similar deal for the
VAX 82x0/83x0 and its RX50. I'd expect that something
similar would apply to the VAX 8600.
>As for copying the RX01. Install VMS on a drive, and play with that.
>You have a command file for making copies of the console media there.
I seem to remember Gunther and VMS not being such good
friends last time around on a VAX 6000 - maybe he should
try a smaller system first :-)
I'm pretty sure that something like:
$ SYSGEN
SYSGEN> CONNECT CONSOLE
SYSGEN> EXIT
$ MOUNT/FOREIGN CSA1:
$ HELP EXCHANGE
should help (OK - I forget how to drive exchange!).
I don't remember whether the console devices will be
CSA1: and CSA2: or CSA0: and CSA1: ... SHOW DEVICE CS
will sort that out.
Merry Christmas,
Antonio
arcarlini(a)iee.org
Sellam Ismail <foo(a)siconic.com> wrote:
> Whether this will work depends on how punch card encoding works. From
> what I can tell so far, there will only ever be one of the 1-9 numbered
> rows punched per column, but there can be any combination of the 0, 11,
> and 12 rows. Is this correct?
No. Symbol characters do not follow this rule, for example the period
character '.' is encoded as punches in rows 12, 3, and 8.
You should assume that any combination of rows may be punched. As a
general rule, I think you'll find that for cards containing printable
characters, no more than 3 punches are made in any column, but I don't
think you can assume this for cards containing binary data.
Doug Jones has a page that you should look at:
<http://www.cs.uiowa.edu/~jones/cards/codes.html>
...but I can't get there right now, so you might need to look in
Google's cache (long URL w/wrap):
<http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:AeJS4EmmG4gC:www.cs.uiowa.edu/~jones/c…>
-Frank McConnell
Well, occassionally we stumble across something that is kind of unusual
at a great price! Yesterday at TRW, Dave (senior moment, can't remember
his last name but former member of this list) told me about a Heath 3400
microprocessor for sale. Turned out that the guy had the Heath
Microprocessor trainer AND and a mostly unbuilt (resistors only soldered
in the board) Heath I/O interface; both were in the original box and
included the original manual! I have seen very few of the Heath
interface units, and finding one that was essentially unbuilt was ...
inspiring :)!!!
I had a friend who was telling me once about a computer company he had
heard of called, oddly enough, Dinosaur Computers.
If memory serves me right, they were based out of the state he was living
in at the time (either Michigan or Wisconsin, I don't remember which).
Anyone know anything about these guys?
--
David Vohs
netsurfer_x1(a)fastmailbox.net
--
http://fastmail.fm - A fast, anti-spam email service.
An explanation of the title: I'm looking to trade some of my surplus
classic computer, and other, equipment for used pro-sound equipment
(what I'm looking for is listed at the end) Some of what's available
for trade:
* A large, double-height, non-DEC, Qbus expansion chasis, complete with
it's own power supply, lighted power switch, etc. on the front panel.
This is rather large and heavy.
* A set of DECVoice cards for a q-bus VAX
* Kaypro IV computer
* Many Sun-3 VME-bus boards (sorry, still no complete list of these)
that have taken over too large a part of the garage and the top of my
workbench. What I do know is that there are many CG3 boards that I'd
like to get rid of, along with graphics accellerators, etc. If you've
discussed these before with me, please don't hesitate to pester me to
check to see if I have a board that you're looking for... sometimes I
forget, and sometimes there are other things in the way of my getting
to these boards.
* PDP-11/03 chasis (may or may not have any boards, such as a CPU, in
it)
* 25" Zenith picture tube from the 1970's or earlier (I've no idea
what to do with this, but it would be a shame to toss it in the
trash... it's been taking up space for a couple of decades, and I'd
like to find a good home for it). Somewhere, I may even have the
solid metal front panel that goes with it. Buy this tube (for a
ridiculously low price!), and I'll toss in the front panel for *free*
if I can find it ...don't delay, as this special bonus offer may
expire within the next decade or so! :-)
* 17" HP color monitor
* 19" Apollo color monitor
* Apollo DN3500 with color board.
* Parts for a PDP-11/34A, including power supply in bits, front panel,
assorted hardware such as cables and screws, boards, etc. Just add a
chasis and you may find that you have nearly a working system... maybe
you can even convince me to part with the real core memory for it!
* A Falco 5000 (F5000?) terminal that needs a few adjustments
* A Macintosh 512K
* A 19" wide rack-mountable slide-out drawer. You need one of these
in your PDP-11's rack, don't you? Yes, you do! :-)
* A QMS printer controller (?) board for Macintosh computers
Other things that may be of interest to some...
* CRT from an ancient Dumont oscilloscope
* A modular GE mobile transceiver with valves in the transmitter and
receiver. The third module is a vibrator type power supply. This was
originally used as a police radio or somesuch. The case that
surrounds this is missing, but you get the frame that holds the
modules together. Somewhere, I may have the service manual for it.
* A vintage Kenwood (KR-7070, IIRC) top-of-the line receiver, from the
1970s, in need of a little restoration work, complete with real-wood,
not veneer, cabinetry.
= = = = = = = = =
Items on my audio and synthesis "want list" include:
* compressor/limiter (preferably one using tubes)
* spectral enhancer or similar equipment (e.g. DBX model 726)
* instrument condenser microphone (at least 30Hz to 20KHz bandwidth,
+/- 3 db);
* Tascam DX-4D, 4-channel DBX-1 unit
* 8-channel 1/2" reel to reel with good heads & motors ...and other
mechanical bits in good or repairable condition. Test tape for
calibration must still be available from some source.
* old 12-plus channel mixer board (must have analog VU meters); ok to
be in need of electronic/electrical repairs; prefer Yamaha boards, but
that's not a definite requirement
* 19" mobile console rack that will hold rack-mounted multitrack
recorder at a 20 to 45 degree, or so, angle (e.g., something
resembling a Tascam CS-607B rack)
* phase shifter
* factory patch tapes for Juno-60 synth
* audio patch bay (16 to 32 channels)
--
Copyright (C) 2002 R. D. Davis The difference between humans & other animals:
All Rights Reserved an unnatural belief that we're above Nature &
rdd(a)rddavis.org 410-744-4900 her other creatures, using dogma to justify such
http://www.rddavis.org beliefs and to justify much human cruelty.
>If you really want to open it, take a
>BIC disposable pen, and remove the ink and the black end piece, leaving
>an empty tube. Shove a hex shaped pencil in one end, and a T-15 driver
>bit in the other. This creates a crude, but very functional Mac opener.
>If you use a long enough pencil, it is pretty easy to use.
Now if that ain't the coolest Mac Hack!
>Getting the
>case apart after the screws are out can be tricky too, and they sold a
>special tool to do it, but I have always just to be able to pull the
>halves apart.
A small spring wood clamp with the rubber end caps removed works well.
Stick the clamp end into the slot between the front and rear halves, and
then squeeze the handle. As the clamp goes to open, it will pry the
halves apart. Do this gently in a few places around the case, and the
whole unit will easily pop apart.
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
Hi,
i've put this request on the list some times ago, but i was unsuccessful :-( ...
... maybe i've more luck now ??
Thanks Bernd
Bernd Kopriva Tel: 07195 / 179452
Weilerstr. 24 E-Mail : bernd(a)kopriva.de
71397 Leutenbach
Hi, has anyone experienced a condition in a pc power supply that would
intermittently put out a high enough voltage to zap the hard drive?
Regards
Charlie Fox
Charles E. Fox Video Production
793 Argyle Rd.
Windsor Ontario Canada N8Y 3J8
519-254-4991 foxvideo(a)wincom.net
Check out the "Camcorder Kindergarten"
at http://chasfoxvideo.com
>Were there some that were individually, personally signed?
>Were all Mac plus delivered with these mass produced signatures?
>Or were only some delivered with these mass produced signatures?
>If these mass produced signatures were only on some Macs,
>approximately how many were supposed to have these signatures?
All Mac Pluses have those signatures.
In fact all Mac's starting from the first (128, but before it was called
that), thru the SE have signatures. And, I believe all the IIs, and some
of the IIx's, and maybe others. I'm not as positive at what point in the
II line it stopped, and I know it stopped somewhere midline with a model,
so there is at least one model that has sigs, but not in all of them.
So people that sell their 128, 512, Plus, or SE with "signatures" are
either ignorant, or trying to jack up the price hoping to catch other
ignorant people.
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
Having (almost) survived the traditional end-of-the-year cleaning and
general re-shuffling... I'm preparing some more things to place in the
'Garage, Garage Sale' and wanted to check something.
Knowing that I'm hopeless in keeping track of such things...
Has everyone who had purchased something from the Garage Sale so far
received their item(s)?
If not, please drop me a note and I'll try to get it out ASAP. (I'm such
a space case)
Thanks;
-jim
---
jimw(a)agora.rdrop.com
The Computer Garage - http://www.rdrop.com/~jimw
On Thu, 12 Dec 2002 ard(a)p850ug1.demon.co.uk (Tony Duell) wrote:
> > Huh? No. Actually, the data track itself is used as the servo signal. The
> > head centers in on the track by centering on where the amplitude is
> > strongest.
>
> Do you have any evidence for that?
Yup. I quote:
"1.3.3.2 Sector Format - As shown in Figure 1-3, each sector contains:
* Servo information for head positioning
* Head (address) information
* Data - 128 words of 16 bits each, or
256 bytes of 8 bits each, or
170 words of 12 bits each
Only the data portion can be written by the user. The servo and header
information is protected by the drive logic and controller to ensure disk
integrity and cannot be written in the field.
Each sector starts with a sector pulse that is produced by a sector
transducer mounted on the drive unit. It senses the sector notches that
are machined into the hub of the disk cartridge.
During the time that sector notch passes by the sector transducer, the
heads detect two servo pulse bursts (S1 and S2) that are prerecorded on
the platter. These servo bursts are used by the drive logic for head
positioning."
Seems like there shouldn't be any argument about this. The RL drives have
the servo information embedded in the normal track.
> > seek to a track, you check the current track, calculate the track delta,
> > and request that of the drive. When the drive report ready you once again
> > check the track to see which one you actually are on. Hopefully it is the
> > right, but if not, do another seek.
>
> Incidentally, every drive I've ever worked on records the current track
> number in the header. Even drives (like the RK's) where you can command
> the drive to move to a given track. It is possible for the drive to get
> confused and think the heads are on a different track to the one that
> they actually are on. It's better to do a restore (seek to track 0 --
> something that is detected by a separate sensor) and re-seek to the
> desired track than to overwrite the wrong sector.
Eh. This is on most controller not something you check or take care about
in software, but hardware. When you specify to the controller (for
instance en RK11) that you want track 10, it both figures out how many
tracks the heads need to move, and in which direction. It then checks that
you really are at the right track, otherwise you get an error back.
The RL11 have no such sophistication. You request a head move, and the
drive hopefully does it, and then you can carry on with the next
command. There is no checking at all in hardware, except for moving
outside the data area, which just stops the heads at the end.
> > Correctly position the heads when you don't have a servo track, and the
> > heads are actuated by voice coils, means you cannot position the heads at
> > all.
>
> You _can_, but you need a specially-modified drive. You can't use the
> off-disk signals for position feedback. Instead you have to couple up
> some other kind of transducer to the positioner and use that. An optical
> interfereometertype thingy is the normal thing to use I believe.
Sounds like a probable setup, yes.
> Incidentally, RL's don't use a voice coil. It's a little DC motor and
> pulley mechanism.
Hmmm. I'm pretty sure it's voice coil. You want me to dig out that manual
too? :-)
I could also open up one of the many drives I have around me. The only
pulley I've ever seen is for the spindle. And one have even trashed on me.
> > Which no RL01/RL02 controller can do. There is no function to write sector
> > headers. So, in addition to finding another drive to be able to position
> > the heads, you need another controller, to be able to write the data.
>
> Getting round this is the easy part once you've got the drive to keep the
> heads in the right place. The RL controller is conceptually simple (and
> as you're only _writing_, you'd not need to bother with the PLL (used to
> produce a read clock) on the homebrew header-writter.
Well, now that I've pointed out that the servo information is also
expected to show up, and that the drive checks that, and the rest of the
information is constantly checked by the controller, it should be
appearant that it's not that easy. While the RL controller might be
conceptually easy, it's a rather complex thing as stuff normally done by
the drive on other subsystems are actually done by the controller here.
Basically, if you don't have the servo information correct on the platter,
the drive will signal errors to the controller, and the controller which
just miserably fail unless header infomration keep coming in when the
drive is running.
Johnny
Johnny Billquist || "I'm on a bus
|| on a psychedelic trip
email: bqt(a)update.uu.se || Reading murder books
pdp is alive! || tryin' to stay hip" - B. Idol
I found paw prints, likely that of a ferile feline, outside my door, in
the snow.
-----Original Message-----
From: Jerome H. Fine
Sent: Sat 12/28/2002 3:36 PM
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Cc:
Subject: Re: DEC 11/03 on eBay
>John Lawson wrote:
> > On Sat, 28 Dec 2002, Jerome H. Fine wrote:
> > Seller also seems to has used an out-of-focus set of shots
to blur
> > any damage.
> Gee, Jerry, I dunno... the cat seemed pretty sharp to
me.... ;)
> John
Jerome Fine replies:
I don't normally reply to the banter, but in regard to the cat?
A cat that looks almost identical "ADOPTED" my wife about
3 years ago. She is a stray and stays out almost all summer
in Toronto when it is warm. In the winter, right now there is
about 2" of snow on the ground (Toronto does NOT get the
snow storms that Buffalo gets), so she only goes out for an
hour or two each day - 15 minutes at a time. She hates being
cold. Every time the door bell rings, she runs upstairs and
hides under the bed - when she is already inside - obviously.
As for her claws - they are VERY, VERY SHARP!! She
needs them to climb the trees and the fence. And her teeth are
just as sharp.
YES!! I admit that I also love her very much.
Sincerely yours,
Jerome Fine
--
If you attempted to send a reply and the original e-mail
address has been discontinued due a high volume of junk
e-mail, then the semi-permanent e-mail address can be
obtained by replacing the four characters preceding the
'at' with the four digits of the current year.
Found a disk case at the thrift store that claims to contain the system
software for a Xerox Memorywriter 630. Contains four 5.25" floppys marked
as follows:
white XEROX 630 Memorywriter label, blank, non-write-protected
green XEROX 630 Memorywriter label, `Base System', `REORDER NO. 9R23303
VERSION 6.0 3Q85-B', write-protected
blue XEROX 630 Memorywriter label, `Options', `REORDER NO. 9R23302 VERSION
4.0 1Q85-B', write-protected
pink XEROX 630 Memorywriter label, `Forms', `REORDER NO. 9R23301 VERSION 3.0
1Q85-B', write-protected
also 2 each spare pink & blue labels w/o the version, etc. info.
No apparent physical damage, and the oxide showing in the window isn't
funny-looking, but YMMV.
Avaliable for shipping, but I'm currently in need of a set of four 2MB SIMMs
(w/ IBM's SPD) to fit in a P70... hint hint... :)
Bob
evan <evan947(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
> Hi all... besides than the HP-95/100/200, what are
> other DOS clamshells of the era? I'm aware of the
> Atari Portfolio and the Poqet device, but there are
> several more, methinks...
Olivetti Quaderno? I haven't thought of those in years,
but my recollection is that it's a small XT clone with a
voice recorder feature.
More popular in Europe than in the US, too.
-Frank McConnell
Hi!
I just acquired an HP Integral on Ebay. Unfortunately there was no "Software
Engineering ROM" in this one so it is quite limited in terms of what one can
do with it. ( I guess it is quite limited anyway since is is almost 20 years
old )
Is there any one out there that has a "Software Engineering ROM" to sell?
Does any one have a binary image of the contents of the ROM chips? In that
case it wouldn't be to hard to do a simple board one self.
Other stuff for the HP Integral is intersting as well!
Thanks,
/Mattis