Hi there!
Anyone know the history of the Compaq MSA1000 RAID controller? It came out right around the time of the DEC acquisition by Compaq, and survived through the HP merger...
Does anyone know, was it actually designed by DEC engineers, or Compaq?
Thanks in advance!
-Ben
A number of people have asked abt coax terminals. I have a buddy, Rich
Rappaport at RJR Electronics, that does a fantastic job of professionally
refurbishing these. They come with a 90-day warranty.
IBM 3472 Green/Amber Terminal Monitor $125
IBM 3472 Logic & Swivel $35
IBM 3472 122-Keyboard $60
Same prices for 3481 or 3482. He will ship within the US.
Shipping is additional.
Rich Rappaport
RJR Electronics
5300-B Westpark Drive SW
Atlanta, GA 30336
rjrelectronics at aol.com
404-349-7600
Cindy Croxton
Electronics Plus
1613 Water Street
Kerrville, TX 78028
(830)792-3400 phone (830)792-3404 fax
AOL IM elcpls
_____
No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 2013.0.2793 / Virus Database: 2629/5920 - Release Date: 11/26/12
The unit powers on, lights one and 2 come on, and that is it. My IBM
buddies tell me it is because I don't have the mainframe to test it on. No
evidence of screen burn.
Cindy Croxton
Electronics Plus
1613 Water Street
Kerrville, TX 78028
(830)792-3400 phone (830)792-3404 fax
AOL IM elcpls
_____
No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 2013.0.2793 / Virus Database: 2629/5920 - Release Date: 11/26/12
For those who asked, the Apple III powers on, the screen comes up, give a
msg abt mem test, and that is all it does. I do not have the software.
The Lisa, I don't have a kbd that I know of, and the power on button gives
no results.
Cindy Croxton
Electronics Plus
1613 Water Street
Kerrville, TX 78028
(830)792-3400 phone (830)792-3404 fax
AOL IM elcpls
_____
No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 2013.0.2793 / Virus Database: 2629/5920 - Release Date: 11/26/12
I ran across this on Ebay:
160925314748
The pictures are from my web site, and the description AND serial
number listed are lifted right off my page:
http://sturgeon.css.psu.edu/~mloewen/Oldtech/Terminals/VT420.html
Even more amazing, someone apparently already bought one and gave
positive feedback! Needless to say, my terminal is not for sale.
I've filed a fraudulent listing complaint.
Mike Loewen mloewen at cpumagic.scol.pa.us
Old Technology http://sturgeon.css.psu.edu/~mloewen/Oldtech/
>
>
> I've downloaded several ks10 instruction set diagnostics in .SAV file
> format from trailing-edge.com.
>
> In a 36-bit world, I think I understand the .SAV file format. I can't
> figure out the format that I've retrieved.
>
> I've even tried loading the .SAV files that I've retrieved into SIMH but
> SIMH complains about a "Format Error".
>
> Any clues? Did I mung the files copying them from the website?
>
> Rob.
>
Rob,
The .SV file format from OS/8 (PDP 8's OS) is kind of like .SAV...Maybe
someone renamed the file extension for some reason?
Bill
Seems as though the CQD-423 likes another CSR address from the one I chose.
Set it to 772150 solved the problem. This address was at one time for a
KFQSA
DSSI module.
>>>
KA670-A V3.4, VMB 2.12
Performing normal system tests.
66..65..64..63..62..61..60..59..58..57..56..55..54..53..52..51..
50..49..48..47..46..45..44..43..42..41..40..39..38..37..36..35..
34..33..32..31..30..29..28..27..26..25..24..23..22..21..20..19..
18..17..16..15..14..13..12..11..10..09..08..07..06..05..04..03..
Tests completed.
>>>show device
DSSI Bus 0 Node 5 (DISK45)
-DIA5 (RF72)
DSSI Bus 0 Node 7 (*)
DSSI Bus 1 Node 7 (*)
UQSSP Disk Controller 0 (772150)
-DUA2 (RA90)
-DUA3 (RA90)
UQSSP Tape Controller 0 (774500)
Ethernet Adapter
-EZA0 (08-00-2B-0B-B3-6E)
>>>show qbus
Scan of Qbus I/O Space
-20000124 (760444) = 0000
-20000126 (760446) = 0B40
-20001468 (772150) = 0000 RQDX3/KDA50/RRD50/RQC25/KFQSA-DISK
-2000146A (772152) = 0B00
-20001940 (774500) = 0000 TQK50/TQK70/TU81E/RV20/KFQSA-TAPE
-20001942 (774502) = 0BC0
-20001F40 (777500) = 0020 IPCR
Scan of Qbus Memory Space
>>>
To those that responded, thanks, to those who watched and have Qbus
gear, another entry for the notebook of Qbus info.
Dan Snyder
Butler, PA
I recently acquired a bunch of MS42 memory options boards (several 4MB, one
8MB and one 12MB). The 12MB one could be used to take my machine from 20MB
to the full complement of 32MB. The trouble is that the mounting posts used
when you only have one memory option board foul the second memory option
board, the manual tells me to break the old posts off, but I don't want to
do any physical damage to the machine (would prefer to stick to 20MB if I
have to).
Is it possible to get the mounting posts out without breaking them? Or, does
anyone have any spare ones? Ideally I also need the E clips to keep the two
memory options boards properly spaced, I suspect I can survive without them,
but if anyone has any of these going spare I'd be interested in some.
Regards
Rob
Hi All,
Over the past year I've been working on manx now and then. Mostly I
wanted to add a convenient way for me to incorporate scanned content
I've contributed to bitsavers into manx. That system has been in
testing for a little while now and I believe I've gotten things
working to the point where they are usable by myself and a few select
users to add new content to manx.
For end-users you'll notice a few little bugs fixed and some new
features.
There is now an RSS feed of documents added to manx so that you can
track new additions to manx. <http://manx.classiccmp.org/rss.php>
is an RSS feed of the 200 most recently added documents.
If you see any problems with manx, please file a bug report at
<http://manx.codeplex.com>.
--
"The Direct3D Graphics Pipeline" free book <http://tinyurl.com/d3d-pipeline>
The Computer Graphics Museum <http://computergraphicsmuseum.org>
The Terminals Wiki <http://terminals.classiccmp.org>
Legalize Adulthood! (my blog) <http://legalizeadulthood.wordpress.com>
Major progress to report on the SCSI to IDE/SD bridge project. Now the IDE
subsystem and the core CPU/RAM/UART are confirmed working with the debug
monitor. The SCSI subsystem is responsive and development continues on the
firmware. This will be real work since the Z53C80 will be operating in
target mode versus host mode but I think it is doable. It will probably
will never be a speed demon but should work fine for older slower SCSI-1
devices which is the intended audience.
The project is not architecture specific. At least in theory this board
could be useful for a wide variety of computers such as Atari, Amiga, Mac,
DEC, etc as well as less intuitive SCSI-1 using machines such as sewing
machines, synthesizers, lab equipment, etc. Please contact me if you are
interested in joining the development team. Thanks and have a happy
holidays!
Andrew Lynch
From: Andrew Lynch [mailto:LYNCHAJ at YAHOO.COM]
Sent: Saturday, November 24, 2012 11:22 AM
To: 'n8vem at googlegroups.com'
Subject: RE: [N8VEM: 15014] SCSI2IDE Progress
Thanks Wayne! That's fantastic news! Woo Hoo! Thank you very much!
It sounds like we may need a change to the Flash ROM write logic.
I will take a look to see if I can figure out what is causing the glitch.
Thanks and have a nice day!
Andrew Lynch
From: n8vem at googlegroups.com [mailto:n8vem at googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of
Wayne Warthen
Sent: Saturday, November 24, 2012 12:07 AM
To: n8vem at googlegroups.com
Subject: [N8VEM: 15014] SCSI2IDE Progress
I'm happy to report a little progress on the SCSI2IDE front. Today, I was
able to prove out the basic board with Zapple Monitor. I was also able to
drop in the existing PPIDE driver from RomWBW and prove out the PPIDE
interface to a CF card (basic sector read/write tests worked). Finally, I
was also able to read/write the mode data on the SCSI controller chip. This
is all still a bit of a hack, but definitely coming together...
The 32K flash chip on the board was giving me some trouble. The chip kept
getting corrupted during power on/off cycles. I finally severed the /WR
line and tied it high. The chip does have a software write protect
mechanism, but I was afraid to use it because I wasn't sure if my programmer
would know how to unprotect it.
I intend to clean up my work and post a work-in-progress build on the Wiki
in a few days.
-Wayne
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
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On Thu, 22 Nov 2012, Scott Quinn wrote:
> My plan was to ramp it up to 400F in an oven, soak for 5 mins, then cool
> down to minimize thermal issues. Does this sound good?
Is 400 degrees anywhere close to hot enough?
From: Liam Proven
Sent: Thursday, November 22, 2012 6:57 AM
> Ah, apparently *all* the Win9x codebase struggles with approaching a
> gig.
> For some of them, you can't /install/ with more than a certain amount,
> but once it's running you can put the extra RAM back in.
Not just the 9x systems.
Back when I was doing systems administration at XKL, I brought in a new
Dell server (dual Pentium 3 Xeons, 4GB RAM in 1 card, you know, little
box for 1997 :-) running NT 4.0 Terminal Server. As I was adding
engineering applications to the base install, a DLL got overwritten, the
box crashed, and I had to re-install from the ground up--beginning about
19:00 on a Friday night.
Long story short, I was on the phone to Round Rock from about 21:00 till
06:00 the next morning, struggling with the install, which would die at
the point where the system re-boots to run from the disk instead of the
CD. Turned out that the install version could not run in more than 1GB.
After the shift change at Dell, the new guy on the phone said he thought
there was a BIOS setting which would handle the issue, rather than my
having to have a 1GB card FedEx'd for Monday morning. Yup, the BIOS
indeed had a setting which was named roughly "Pretend I have only 256MB
in this box".
Gack.
Rich Alderson
Vintage Computing Sr. Systems Engineer
Vulcan, Inc.
505 5th Avenue S, Suite 900
Seattle, WA 98104
mailto:RichA at vulcan.com
mailto:RichA at LivingComputerMuseum.orghttp://www.LivingComputerMuseum.org/
More YouTube reveals showing computers in my collection which may be of
interest to some. This time my Commodore Pet 3001 32-N (CBM 3032)
http://youtu.be/H42ZPSw8EE8
Terry Stewart (Tez)
Hi.
You might google for people fixing nvidia notebook graphic boards like
in the Dell M90.
They report success in temperature ranges from 120 .. 200?C in their
kitchen ovens for 20 minutes, where the solder may not melt, but
apparenly, the heating suffices to re-establish contact for weeks thru
months. I find it especially interesting that the lower temperatures
also seem to work.
I've even seen a poll on who tried which temperature. Sadly, who made
that poll only asked for successful attempts, not failures, so their
original answer on "what is the best temperature to recommend" would
never be answered...
Kind regards, js
On 23.11.2012 19:00, cctalk-request at classiccmp.org wrote:
> Message: 18 Date: Fri, 23 Nov 2012 08:28:36 -0800 (PST) From: Fred Cisin
> <cisin at xenosoft.com> To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic
> Posts" <cctalk at classiccmp.org> Subject: Re: BGA resoldering - flux?
> Message-ID: <20121123082818.P57681 at shell.lmi.net> Content-Type:
> TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII On Thu, 22 Nov 2012, Scott Quinn wrote:
>> >My plan was to ramp it up to 400F in an oven, soak for 5 mins, then cool
>> >down to minimize thermal issues. Does this sound good?
> Is 400 degrees anywhere close to hot enough?
--
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Dr. med. J?rg M. Sigle +41-76-276-8694
http://www.ql-recorder.com +41-32-51-22-944
http://www.jsigle.com Have a lovely day... +49-176-964-35413
Hi
If anyone is interested in building their own CP/M or other hobbyist home
brew computer there are plenty of N8VEM ECB PCBs available.
These can be used to build your own system from scratch or to augment an
existing home brew computer.
The ECB standard is essentially a Z80 bus so these PCBs are easy to
interface into most any home brew system. They are also reliable and easy to
assemble using only through hole components (no SMT or exotic technologies).
Here is the current inventory of PCBs. As you can see there are many boards
still available for the ECB systems.
http://n8vem-sbc.pbworks.com/PCB-Inventory
The ECB PCBs are $20 each plus $2 shipping in the US and $5 elsewhere. Most
builders send a PayPal to LYNCHAJ at YAHOO.COM but other arrangements are
possible.
All of the design information like schematics, PCB layout, KiCAD EDA files,
software, build instructions, parts lists, etc are all free and publicly
posted on the N8VEM wiki.
If funds and/or PayPal is an issue, we can make trades for certain computer
parts, electronic components, tools, metals, coins, unused gift cards,
shipping materials, scrap, etc.
Please let's discuss! Thanks and have a happy holidays!
Andrew Lynch
After being contacted by Don's niece, I went down on behalf of CHM in July and retrieved
every box of media that was in the storage unit from his garage. I've spent several months
going through everything, including the PCs that were there, and could not find what I had
assumed were disk images that are described in the 'sysdisk.txt' file that Don maintained
which I've attached.
Does anyone have any contacts with the San Diego folks that knew Don that could help with
figuring out where these images would have been? It's possible either they were on more
modern PCs, or on a CP/M system. CHM is not willing to take everything that is still in
the storage unit (mostly paper and the computers that were in the garage). I'm going to
have to make a pretty strong case for trying to recover any of the systems that are still
there.
>
>Subject: Re: Gooey TU58 rollers
> From: "Ethan Dicks" <ethan.dicks at gmail.com>
> Date: Tue, 28 Aug 2007 17:39:20 -0500
> To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts" <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
>
>On 8/27/07, B M <iamvirtual at gmail.com> wrote:
>> I am trying to get a Vax-11/750 machine up and running. It looks like the TU58 drive
>> is suffering from the 'gooey roller syndrome'.
>
>Unsurprising.
>
>> I see that people have successfully used 1/2 inch (ID) Tygon tubing to replace the
>> goo. Is there any specific type of Tygon tubing (eg. R3603, R2000, etc.) that is used?
>
>I don't know the particular variety I used in mine - I just went to
>the Lowe's down the street and bought a foot of 1/2" ID tubing -
>whatever they had on the shelf. I was unaware of a large amount of
>varieties of tubing, so I just used what they had in stock, and it
>worked perfectly.
>
>-ethan
I started that many years ago like 1995ish. I spec'd Tygon (brnad name)
as that was available to me. Most any generic Vinyl tubing works so long
as it fits tight and has enough wall thickness.
After about 10 years it tends to get hard, the fix is obvious.
Allison
Fred noted:
>On Thu, 22 Nov 2012, Scott Quinn wrote:
>> My plan was to ramp it up to 400F in an oven, soak for 5 mins, then cool
>> down to minimize thermal issues. Does this sound good?
>
>Is 400 degrees anywhere close to hot enough?
I'm not entirely sure. 60/40 solder melts at around 360, so I was putting a bit of a fudge factor in for lead free.
There's few standards (or too many) for lead-free solder, it seems.
Would thinned rosin flux work?
Alexandre - the earlier LaserJets are and were very good, up to about the 4000 series. Since then it's been much
more hit and miss. Quite coincidentally they also shifted production to China, but I'm sure there's absolutely
no connection.
The following "stuff" is free to a good home - downsizing the boneyard.
Although, if any of it is genuinely rare or valuable I may change my
mind.
The deal is the usual one : collection from Portland, Dorset, UK; first
come first served; collection prior to Xmas '12; no warranty as to
specifics or condition; reasonable questions answered in a reasonable
timescale.
The highlights are:
- some small (micro) VAXes
- four 1" instrumentation recorders
- an LN03 + consumables
- an LA210 on a plinth in a large wooden box
- geriatric test instruments of marginal serviceability
- numerous old scopes requiring repair
- some (partial) EPROM programmers
"Collectors Items"
4 off SE7000 1" Instrumentation tape recorders + 2 sets of manuals +
spare channel cards
1 off LA210 (I think) printer in a wooden box
1 off HP 1652B Logic Analyser [fails BIT]
1 off HP 1600A Logic Analyser [condition unknown]
1 off HP 3561 Spectrum Analyser (audio rather than RF) [flaky]
2 off HP 1200 ? storage CRO mainframes
1 off LN03 laser printer for VAXen + supplies
3 off MDB boxes for RD54 drives (c/w caddies - no disks)
1 off microVax 3400
2 off VAX 4000-200
"Junk"
Fax machine - laser print very dirty (not used for several years)
HP G55 USB inkjet (not used for several years)
9 off VGA monitors
Stag Eprom Eraser - condition unknown
Stag Gang Programmer - no PC interface, might be serial
Telequipment D83 2 ch CRO 4 off [condition unknown]
Gould "3000" 2 ch CRO 2 off [condition unknown]
Gould OS250 CRO 2 off [condition unknown]
Gould 3500 Cro 1 off [condition unknown]
Gould 4050 Cro 1 off [condition unknown]
Telequipment D75 1 off [condition unknown]
Telequipment D66 1 off [condition unknown]
[Telequipment may be worth a 3 out of 6 attempt; Goulds look more suited
to breaking up; but you never know]
Philips PM3295 1 off [voltage multiplier failed and unobtainium => scrap
/ parts]
SCSI disk enclosures [condition unknown, PSU salvage ?]
"Total" Junk - job lot of unservicable PSUs etc
If you know of any 3rd parties with a serious use for this sort of kit,
suggest they contact me.
The last resort for disposition of much of this will be WEEE.
Martin
Alexandre intoned:
> DV-series notebook? :)
>
[...]
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Scott Quinn" <saquinn624 at aol.com>
>To: <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
>Sent: Thursday, November 22, 2012 7:45 PM
>Subject: BGA resoldering - flux?
>
>
>I have a non-CC HP device
>[...]
Nope, HP LaserJet p20somethingorother printer. Controller board developed random
errors from time to time.
I have a non-CC HP device that has developed issues, probably because of a combination of the lead-free
transition and usual Chinese quality.
I'm planning on attempting a re-solder by reflowing in an oven (no hot-air rework station yet).
It seems as though it would be best to find some way to flux the balls to ensure that the
connection is good. I'm not removing the chip, so would a solution of rosin flux diluted in
alcohol and dripped onto the BGA work? Any better way, or is it unnecessary?
My plan was to ramp it up to 400F in an oven, soak for 5 mins, then cool down to minimize thermal
issues. Does this sound good?
I've recently restored a DEC TU58 dual-transport tape system but am
finding that 30+ year old DC100A cartridges are perhaps past the end of
their useful life.
The belts in many of them have rotted and broken.
There are still some places you can get new cartridges, but they are
more than $40 a piece.
Has anyone found a way to source and replace the broken belts?
I am not interested in preserving the data on the tapes as much as I
am interested in just having working tapes... so I don't get ahead by
moving a belt from a "good" cartridge to a bad one. I'm interested in
trying to repair the bad cartridges.
I've seen the writeup here, for the HP 9845 and its DC100As,
http://www.hp9845.net/9845/tutorials/savetapes/index.html
but that doesn't tell us what to do about broken belts other than to
steal them from other cartridges...
Chris
--
Chris Elmquist
On Fri, Nov 16, 2012 at 12:05 PM, Dave McGuire <mcguire at neurotica.com> wrote:
> On 11/16/2012 11:09 AM, Ethan Dicks wrote:
>> Nice. I have a couple of older Alphas (one is *much* larger, with a
>> Futurebus+), so I know a little about the line, but not the later
>> models. I had no idea HP packaged them up with their hot-swap drives.
>> I've only ever seen DEC-badged Alphas in person.
>
> What FB+ Alphas do you have?
One of these...
http://www.old-computers.com/museum/computer.asp?st=1&c=895
4000 AXP Model 710. Got it 10 years ago, fiddled with it when I first
got it (it boots to one of two different versions of UNIX on two of
the 5 installed SCSI disks) but don't have much reason to use it
often.
One interesting historical note - it was formerly OSCAR, the card
catalog computer for the Ohio State University library system. I
picked it up from surplus for $50 because I wanted the included TSZ07
(and I can't ship a TSZ07 for $50!) I put more hours on the tape
drive reading old backup tapes than I ever put on the server.
It has one CPU and about 1/4 the max amount of memory.
-ethan