A website (cited on Memepool) about the development of various
open-source OSes for 8-bitters.
http://www.dunkels.com/adam/contiki/
Perhaps it has been discussed here before; I don't remember it, though.
And, from France - one for Intellivision...
http://intyos.free.fr/index.php
Chz
Jhn
>> OK, got a few captioned pictures of the Torch stuff up for those
>
> What's in the Cifer manuals, Jules?
They're all Uniplus system III manuals.
cheers
Jules
________________________________________________________________________
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I have two DEC waist-high racks available.
They are the super-sturdy kind that can hold a pair of RL-O2s and
a PDP11/34 with no problem.
They have the side modesty panels, tops I *might* have around
but no guarantee.
Best offer I get in 48 hrs gets one or both.
I can ship them by ltl truck freight, but prefer pickup in Mpls, MN.
Picture of one at alt.binaries.pictures.radio
If you contacted me about something in the basement sale I posted
earlier, and I haven't responded, I must apologize. My email has been
acting up a little, and I have been flooded with spam. Also, I will
need a little time to get everything straightened out and ready to go
before I can quote shipping prices or get stuff shipped out. Since I am
in the middle of reorganizing the basement/workshop, everything is
everywhere, and I need to continue sorting and weeding out so I have
more room to work. Also, I should have a lot more stuff to offer soon.
Once again, sorry for the delay, bear with me, and I'll definitely be
able to get stuff to people, it just may take a few more days to get
straightened out.
Also, while cleaning tonight, I found some other things
Original IBM AT motherboard, complete with stacked RAM chips. Untested.
$2 + shipping
Original IBM AT power supply. Untested. $2 + shipping
Apple IIe(enhanced) motherboard. Works. $2 + shipping
XT clone power supply. Untested. $2 + shipping
Macintosh 1.44 meg Manual inject floppy drives. Cleaned, lubricated and
tested. $4 + shipping
SCSI CD-ROM reader. 2x (I think). Works. $4 + shipping
Once again, prices are just suggestions, feel free to make an offer.
I'll post another, more complete list at the end of the week. I still
have more stuff to wade through.
Ian Primus
ian_primus(a)yahoo.com
Would be nice to go back to those days!!
How are you Al? What are you up to these days? Still in computers in NY?
I stumbled across the message you posted (below) while doing some
research on Michael Daddio (remember the idiot that ran Corvus), and
figured I'd drop you a line to say hi.
Hope all's well with you.
Vinny
************************
Vincent Furfaro
President
KVA Communications
www.kva.com <http://www.kva.com/>
888-KVA-3366
vfurfaro(a)kva.com <mailto:vfurfaro@kva.com>
************************
> From: "Steven N. Hirsch" <shirsch(a)adelphia.net>
> Subject: Any Corvus collectors out there?
>
> Hi,
>
> I'm new to this list and wondering how many Corvus
> collectors are out there.
Hi,
I'm not exactly a Corvus collector, but I used to work
for Lawrence S. Epstein Associates, LTD., and we were
the East Coast Distributor for Corvus Equipment for
quite awhile...
And I have a couple of drives and various odds and
ends taking up space in a closet...
I have some IBM XT Omninet Adapters, I think a couple
of older Apple II adapters, Some Mirror Boards, an "H"
series drive, and an old Apple II only OmniDrive.
I also have manuals and software, maybe even a
constellation adapter too..
Those were the days... When a 70mb HDD sold for
$8000.00... :)
Al
Hi Mike,
Wanted to let you know, I received the manual in yesterday's mail. Thank you.
Sorry I had to send the thanks via this email address, I was running out of space and I clicked one too many times.
Thanks again,
Barry
> I didn't say it was rare. The seller did. I just thought it unusual.
> But perhaps not $299.00 unusual. I ran into some Z248's
> at NTC San Diego, and at the DRMO here in Norfolk, but I
> hadn't ever seen one of the Tempest Shielded ones yet.
Ditto. I had to deal with them at three different commands. None of them
were Tempest shielded..... I take that back, I think one was. The only
Tempest PC clone equipment that I really had any dealings with were ancient
IBM PC's with dual 5Mb IOMEGA removable media drives.
Zane
Hello all,
I've come into possession of a Mostek computer (I'm pretty sure it's a
computer anyway) with a pair of 8" half height floppy drives (Shugart
860s) and three cards.
The cards are roughly 6x4 inches with a 56 finger edge connector on one
of the long ends and various connectors on the opposite end (I'm not
familiar with these). They are labeled MDX-FLP2 (plugged into the
drives - obviously a floppy controller), MDX-SIO (almost certainly a
serial IO card) and MDX-CPU3. The last card is the processor card. The
main chip appears to be a MOSTEK Z-80 clone which is labeled MK3801N-4,
Z80-STI AND ENG. PROTO. There are 8 4564s for 64K RAM on the card along
with what are either connectors for serial and/or parallel ports.
The whole box is about the size of a typical rack-mount machine with a
plastic case around it. Most parts are tagged as Mostek and most date
codes are from the middle of 1982.
Of course it came without software or documentation.
Is anyone familiar with this machine? Does anyone have a boot disk,
other software or documentation for it?
Thanks!
Erik Klein
www.vintage-computer.com/vcforum
The Vintage Computer Forum
>From: Hbmjchap(a)aol.com
>Date: Fri, 27 Jun 2003 20:01:31 EDT
>Subject: tandy 1000 EX
>To: jfoust(a)threedee.com
>
>I have a Tandy 1000 EX with 256 K memory in perfect working order. It includes a full color monitor, a daisy wheel printer, the original software, plus the games Kings Quest III and IV. Would you be interested in taking this off of my hands? If so, please e-mail me at schapman711(a)hotmail.com and we can talk terms. Thank you, I look forward to your reply.
>
>Sincerely,
>
>Steve Chapman
I have three of the original cd's that came with the Apple TAM 20th
Anniversary computer and need a copy of the others. I have the OS8 CD, Music
Demo CD, and the Tour CD. I believe there were 7 or 8 in the complete set
that shipped with the TAM. Can someone make a copy of the missing CD's and I
will pay you for them? Thanks in advance.
I need to lay hands on at least one 7438 to stick into my new (to
me) Emulex QD21 to implement the "22-Bit Addressing Kit"... there's
a single socket by the fingers, U49, that accepts the 7438, and a
switch to throw. I can pick up a 7438 for all of $0.28 at B.G. Micro,
but the question is are they hand-picked in any way? If so, what would
I have to construct to replicate the selection process.
Thanks,
-ethan
Hi Pete,
>> Torch Z80 disc pack
> Unusual. Production ones were brown.
Agreed on the Z80 disk pack - doesn't appear to have ever had anything other
than drives and a cable in it. The PSU is still intact, so it'd be complete
again with the addition of drives (which I now have plenty of spares of!). No
idea why it's grey rather than brown, except that so are the XXX 'prototype'
and the 725 machine.
>> Two Torch Computers 68000 boards.
> Not CP/M, that was the board below. These would run a Unix derivative, I
think.
Fair call. One's an 'Atlas' board, which is what the 725 machine also has in
it. The other is a "Torch 68000 board" and seems to date from a year earlier
(1983 rather than 1984). the earlier board has an 8MHz 68k, the Atlas board a
10MHz - but both have CCCP 1.02 ROMs so I expect they behave identically, with
one just being slower than the other.
> CPN, by the way, isn't CP/M. It looks and feels similar, and *some*
> CP/M software is compatible, but not all -- the memory map is different.
given that the 68k boards have CCCP ROMs too I'm not surprised :)
>> Four Xebec boards with a 50 pin connector, 3x 20 pin connectors and single
>> 34-way edge connector. Single Xebec board with a 50 pin connector, 2x 20
pin
>> connectors and single 34-way edge connector.
>
> SASI interfaces to ST412-compatible drives.
I found the manuals to these (and all the other interface boards that I have I
believe) - it seems the cards with the three 20-pin connectors on have SCSI
interfaces. The C520 machine meanwhile has a Torch SASI controller in it and
one of the "2 connector" Xebec boards is plugged into that - so unless a SASI
controller can drive a SCSI device, the "2 connector" Xebec boards have a SASI
interface.
>> CP/N hard disk utilities (single floppy, hand-written label)
>> Torch hard disk utilities (single floppy, again just hand-written label)
>
>Hmm... Could I get a copy of those? I think I have the correct MCP ROM
> somewhere here.
sure, I'm a bit snowed under at the moment so it might not be for a few weeks -
plus I need to find a good way of copying the disks unless my PC's controller
will read them. I should have spare Torch ROM sets for everything so I can
always copy the ROM if I can find a good way of doing it (I've got that EPROM
programmer for the Apple 2 but getting data onto and off the machine needs
figuring out). worst-case there'll be a way of me reading the data via a BBC
and mailing it to you I suppose!
>> Acorn Technical Manual - dated 1979, for a 6502-based SBC. Display is quoted
in
>> the manual as being 9 digits with the leftmost one unused, which may
identify
>> the machine. Possibly a System 1-4 ??
>
> No, it wasn't a System device. That's the original Acorn SBC, I think.
> I've got the matching User's Manual.
It sounds like one of these:
http://www.machine-room.org/computers/6360/technical.html
Of course the website info may be innacurate; and piecing together information
about exactly what Acorn produced in the early days is proving hard - what
little data there seems to be on the web is generally labelled with disclaimers
as to accuracy! :-)
I've since found I have manuals for some of the 'other' cards that seemed to be
available (which I believe worked with the later 'system' machines):
o Laboratory Interface Manual
o Visual Display Unit Interface Board technical manual (issue 1, dated 1979),
also mentions the same teletext decoder as used in the BBC so looks like Acorn
were messing around with that even then.
o Acorn 32K DRAM technical manual (issue 3, 1982) - looks to be designed for
the 'system' machines or the Atom.
o Acorn Extension Memory Board manual (issue 3, 1980) - an 8KB board
o PROM Programmer Board manual (Issue 2, 1981)
o VIA Board (Issue 1, 1980)
o Acorn Analogue Interface technical manual (Issue 1, 1980)
Looking at the list, you can see where the BBC had its origins :)
>> Acorn 6809 users manual - dated 1980, this looks to be for a SBC a
> Mine has a fold-out circuit diagram inside the back cover.
rats, I'm missing that unless it's been tucked away inside something else.
>> Atom Disc Pack construction notes, schematics etc. (anyone got a
>> dump of the ROM to go with this?)
>
> Yes :-)
Hmm, I may have to ask you nicely for a copy of that sometime and build one of
these to go with my Atom... I think everything else I need is covered in the
manual (my Atom's had the memory expansion and BASIC upgrade anyway so it's not
a 'pure' original)
[ BBC FITs]
> Yes, I've got one -- and every Beeb I've ever repaired has passed the
> FIT. You need the software for it; I think the basic A version is
> printed in the manual but there's a B version as well (is that also in
> the manual? I've got one, but not to hand).
What I have is a copy of a confidential Acorn pre-release manual for the FIT
and the PET which makes it a little unique :) But yes, it has listings for the
A and B machines.
It wouldn't surprise me if copies of the associated manuals are still at the
house where I got all this from; stuff from all kinds of machines was just
*everywhere* so there's likely a lot that was missed...
cheers,
Jules
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Tony,
an all-in-one email...
> OK, in the production XXX, the hard and floppy drives were connected to
> an OMTI board, and thence to the SCSI bus. Your unit is consistent with this
Yep, that's exactly what I have. The case may or may not be a stock part. The
XXX case itself looks to be from something else for sure though - there are
even two spare half-height drive bays inside.
The XXX I have is a single board called a 'Stickleback' with various connectors
in it - including BT in/out and an Ethernet port (none of these are actually
wired to the back of the case though). There's also markings on the board for a
VME bus connection, but no socket or associated circuitry.
I'm "missing" two ICs: IC139 is just a socket for a 48 pin IC beneath which is
written "WYN8526(ET)". IC140 next to this is a 24 pin socket and is also empty.
Maybe something to do with the ethernet circuitry? The connector's nearby. (ET
= 'Ethernet Transciever" ?? :)
> The production machines have a 8 pin DIN for video.
OK, I do have that but it's labelled RGB; there's also the hole for a socket
labelled 'video' - but as the case is a hack who knows...
> Be careful. This sounds like the case from something else. Production
> XXXs have 2 DB25 sockets, and both are RS232 ports (one actually carries
> 2 sets of RS232 signals, for a total of 3 serial ports). There is no
> parallel port on the production machines....
My Stickleback board is marked as having RS432 and X.25, both on 25 pin ports.
The RS432 port is wired through to the parallel port on the back of the case,
and the X.25 port is wired through to the RS432 port on the back of the case
:-)
> Production machines don't have a conventional power switch. The PSU is
> controlled by a relay. There's a touch-sensitive contact on the front of
> the box that turns the PSU on when touched.
Except on mine :-) There's a battery hanging loose inside the case, but
nothing resembling touch contacts; it appears that's all been bypassed on this
machine and the power switch works conventionally. I wonder what the correct
procedure of shutting it down safely is... (hopefully one of the various stock
Unix methods will work)
[Torch "Hard Disc"]
> This sounds a bit BBC-micro like!. There is a Torch SCSI hard disk unit
> for the beeb -- it's supposed to be rather rare. The one I've seen is a
> plinth to fit under the nonitor contianing the SCSI interface (connectes
> to the Beeb 1MHz bus) + hard disk and also a floppy drive (connects to the
> normal Beeb disk controller). Maybe you have much the same unit built
> into a case with the Beeb mainboard and monitor.
OK, been inside now - it is a BBC, with a Torch Z80 coprocessor. Torch SASI
interface hooked up to the BBC's 1MHz bus, with a Xebec interface hanging off
that which talks to the hard drive. Integral display is a Microvitec (probably
a Cub). The case appears to be production quality but is a very oddball design
(as is the seperate PSU). See seperate post for link to pics if you can
motivate yourself to look at some grahpics :-}
The keyboard's an ineresting custom design with about a million keys :-) Half
of these seem to be labelled with various wordprocessing functions. I since
believe I'm missing a modem from it, but one of the spares I have will fit -
not sure where it hooks up to the rest of the system though.
[ Torch-725 ]
> The QuadX I have is in the same case (basically) as a production XXX. But
> the mainboard is a singla 6U VME card, and there's a little 3 slot (I
> think) VME cardcage in the bottom slice. Much the same PSU as
Hmmm... ok, what I have in that 725 is another BBC, a 68k Torch Atlas board,
Torch SCSI interface, and a Xebec controller talking to the full-height drive.
I need to go poke around in the documentation sometime. And I'll have to hassle
the guy I got these from about the rack-mount QX he has if this is in fact
something different :)
Information on what exactly a Torch Unicorn was would be useful, to be honest.
Some people seem to think it was the name of a complete machine, whilst others
think it was just the name for the range of Torch cards available for the BBC.
Just idly wondering if the 725 was a prototype Unicorn or something; I don't
have details of exactly what machines Torch made.
> This does not sound like a XXXX....
I do have a spare hard disk labelled as Quad X, those tape drives and
controller boards, a surplus Torch-stock PSU, complete ROM set, and the
complete schematics for the QX VME card. I'll just go build myself one... ;-)
>> Triple X PSU (or so I was told; not having a 'genuine' Triple X I don't
>> know!)
>
> Can you describe it? I've got a couple of XXXs (including a nicely
> expanded one with a Quinring on top), and quite a pile of spares...
Duh! I just picked it up; I'd only noticed the Farnell label before. It
actually says "Triple X 100W" on the side :) It's not the same as the power
supply in my "prototype" XXX which is a 150W unit, same as the one in the big
"Hard Disc" machine.
> In theory the XXX can support a tape drive on the SCSI bus, but I've
> never managed to get it to work...
I'll keep an eye out when I go through the docs I have. I noticed on the
previous owner's invoices for the XXX that I now have that he recieved it with
a tape drive. Maybe there'll be some info amongst everything that says how it
hooks up. The two tape drives I got were from XXX machines so I can grab model
numbers / interface details from those too.
>> Seven issue 3 Torch manta boards,
> These are used in XXX and XXXX machines if you have a real SCSI hard
> drive (as opposed to an ST506 one on an OMTI board).
gotcha. I can't imagine I can make use of seven of them, unless driving them is
easy enough that I can use them in other systems... I've got the docs for the
boards but I don't know how detailed they are yet.
>> Two Torch key disks (with different serial numbers).
> You may not have realised it yet, but the Torch OS is keyed to the serial
> number of the (uncopyable) Key disk. If you have to re-install the OS, or
> if the NiCd goes flat, or... you need the right key disk...
uh-oh :-)
I have two, for machines with two different serial numbers. Hopefully one works
with the 'prototype' system I have (or, if it is a prototype, they disabled
this feature :-)
cheers
Jules
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Visted one of my favorite scrounging places today and found a Otrona
Attache and a Soroc Terminal (1802 CPU :-) :-) Also got two shugart 851 8"
floppy drives, an IC Master (1988) a stack of DRI CPM manuals, a DEC PDP-8
handbook and a notebook full of Mostek computer board manuals. Oh and an
AIM-65 User's Guide.
Does anyone have disks for the Otrona?
:-)
Joe
I'm looking at a new job; one of the requirements is a familiarity
with VME and CAMAC (it's how they mount their data aquisition hardware).
I used to work with Mizar-brand VME cards long ago, so I'm not a
complete novice, but I think I ought to do some brushing up before
being subjected to the techie gauntlet. Googling for "VME and CAMAC"
turns up a lot of hits. :-) Can anyone make suggestions on some
good overview texts? Web preferred, but if I have to, I can resort
to the local Uni library.
At some point, I'll have to know how to operate as well as repair
the equipment, but I'll be happy just to be able to participate in
a discussion of the hardware without looking like a goob in the
interview.
Thanks for any help narrowing down the search.
-ethan
Tempest shielded Zeniths aren't all that rare. The US Goverenment made a
HUGE purchase of Zenith computers back in the mid '80s and many of them
ended up being shielded for use in various goverenment agencies. I used to
see pallet loads of shielded Zeniths and even a hand-full of shielded
MacIntoshes at one of the scrap places that I frequent.
Joe
At 08:40 AM 6/27/03 -0400, you wrote:
>Here's one that seems unusual
>
>
>RARE Zenith Inteq 248 PC Tempest Shielding
>
>http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=2738292042
>From: Ethan Dicks <erd_6502(a)yahoo.com>
>Subject: Emulex resources?
>
>I've been to Al's repository on spies.com and found a few documents,
>but I'm looking for some info on a variety of Emulex disk controllers.
>The level of detail I'm at is what controllers support which drives
>and emulate which DEC interfaces...
>
>I.e. - I have an SC21 on the way that emulates an RH11/RH70 and lets me
>talk to a variety of SMD drives as if they were RM02/RM03/RM05/RM80
>drives. I also have a QD34 that was an entire Pound that I'd like to
>press into service, but I have no cables... I was contemplating removing
>the I/O transition board and fabricating a "standard" A&B cable connector
>interface (60 pin/multi-26-pin).
>
>I'm also curious to get a reference to other controllers in case I
>see them float by... most of the ones for sale lack specifics due to
>seller ignorance.
Hi,
I have original Emulex manuals for CS09 (16 line-comm. controller) and DM01
(ST506-disk (MSCP) and SA450 floppy) controller both for the Qbus.
If this isn't available yet, I can make copies or lend the manuals to someone
who puts this to the web.
Other doc available: Codar 170 time of day clock/watchdog module for Q-bus,
DSD 880 Floppy/harddrive combination for Q-bus and Unibus,
Able computer systems, Qniverter, Qbus to unibus adapter,
several National semiconductor Qbus memory card for Q-bus.
Looking myself for doc's and/or jumper-settings for:
- Excelan exos 203 quad Q-bus controller, (probably ethernet??)
- Chrislin Industries CI-1123+ dual Memory-board
- SMS sientific micro systems Disc-adapter assy nr 0003770-0001, connects via
40 pole flatcable to a formatter 0003904-0001 that connects to several
8" discs- (eg Quantum Q2000) and floppy drives Shugart SA800
- Kaiser & Dr. Damm GmbH, MOT11-D1 ser. line controller with local MC6809,
aperantley a german made module, but maybe also sold worldwide....?
Frank
A guy I went to college with has a VAX 11/725 he's about to trash. Is
anyone interested? I think it is located near DC. He says it won't boot
but I don't know anything else. I can try to find out if anyone is
interested.
> Are there disk images of early versions of RT-11 available
> for use with the SimH simulator? Like V02C and V03B. (I
> think V03B was the last release of V3.)
They exist, but they aren't available. There are holes in what is known to
still exist. I'm not aware of any copies of V1 (was there even a V1?). I
know that copies of both versions you mention are known to exist.
Zane
Are there disk images of early versions of RT-11 available
for use with the SimH simulator? Like V02C and V03B. (I
think V03B was the last release of V3.)
Thanks,
Dave
--
David C. Jenner
djenner(a)earthlink.net
Hi again,
Here's the documentation and software haul that goes with the Torch hardware I
picked up earlier. The docs are probably about as complete as possible - and
enormous! Copying them is probably a little unrealistic; there's probably a
good 30,000 pages there - but If anyone collecting Torch hardware needs
anything looking up just shout!
cheers
Jules
Software
5.25" disks.
Single boxed copy of the Triple X System V.2 issue 2 disk set - another 30 or
so disks.
CP/N hard disk utilities (single floppy, hand-written label)
Torch hard disk utilities (single floppy, again just hand-written label)
Two Torch key disks (with different serial numbers).
Floppy with a Torch label on saying "spell binder" - no idea!
Floppy labelled as: "Torch CP/N Unix/68k CP/N Support tune.com, unix.com,
icheck.com etc."
Floppy hand-labelled as "MOSF4.11 selecta M/3.5 disks".
Core documentation
--------------------
Unisoft Uniplus System III manual set - 3 volumes
Unisoft Uniplus System V manual set - 8 volumes
Triple X Administrators manual
Triple X Handbook
Triple X Users manual (section 1)
Triple X Users manual (sections 2-6)
Triple X Programming manual
Triple X Inside System V manual
Triple X Caretaker manual
Triple X Telecomms Manager manual
Triple X Software catalogue
Triple X Gold Card newsletters 1-5
Torch Computers User Guide
Torch Computers ZEP 100 User Guide
Torch Computers Unix Guide
Torch Computers Unicomm User Guide
Torch Computers Programmers Guide
Quad X Handbook
Quad X Janitor
Quad X Inside System V
Quad X Opentop Programming
Torch-725 Hardware Reference Manual (photocopied, in a Torch binder with added
schematics, notes etc.)
Torch X Window System Handbook
Torch X Toolkit manual
ASM68 Language Manual for UniPlus+
Introduction to Issue 2.0 of System V.2 (stapled together, no binder)
System V.2 - Issue 2.0 List of Files
Torch-related Oddities
-------------------------------
Manual for the Torch Manta board
Binder labelled as "All the stuff Torch didn't tell you!" - seems to be a C
programming guide.
Binder labelled as "Unix user guide" - notes on the basics, VI, shells etc.
Binder for the VME320QX board (a Quad X on a VME bus card) with the following
sections: Quad X spec / Quad X board manual / Openchip spec / Openchip
programming manual / Quad X circuit diagram / Quad X parts list revisions /
manufacturing notes / board layout
3rd party documentation set: two ring binders with sections labelled as "XXX
manuals" and sections as follows: System V.0 issue 1.3 / Unix 5.2 product
description / Unix V.2 list of files / XXX install / despatch notes (original
shipping invoices!) / additional section 1 pages / hints / printing / B-net /
NFS / multiuser / tape streamer / DOS disc utilities / 80MB disk drive /
Versaterm 100 / Fortran F77
________________________________________________________________________
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Free for postage:
1 IBM 5250 Emulation Adaptor ISA #82G7060
1 HP SCSI Adaptor ISA (for Scanjet?) #C1752-66500
I found these half-length ISA cards in the trash on the way to work today & have no need for them. Each is in a zip-lock bag and looks OK, but is untested. Postage would be about $2.00 each.
Robert A. Feldman
robert_feldman(a)jdedwards.com
>From: "Pentinmaki, Isaac" <Isaac.Pentinmaki(a)KRAFT.COM>
>To: "'jfoust(a)threedee.com'" <jfoust(a)threedee.com>
>Subject: computer rescue
>Date: Wed, 25 Jun 2003 10:48:42 -0500
>
>How old are you looking for ?
>I have an old Sun 68k that I've been trying to get motivated to recycle. The
>computer has been off so long the boot prom has to be reset from the bios.
>It's about the speed of a fast 386 and the monitor is very heavy.
>
>Isaac Pentinmaki
>Glythor Inc. Consultant @ Kraft
>608 285 4592
Hi,
I have a couple of Dataram DR-118 core boards for a PDP-8 (Omnibus).
Anyone have any information on this (specifically how to jumper it for
the proper addresses). I *think* it's a 16kx12 but I'm not certain.
Thanks.
--
TTFN - Guy
hello there.
i understand you might have a copy of the software for the up200.
i just acquired one and need the software please.
also if you have any idea about the cable from the unit to the computer it would be greatly appreciated.
thank you in advance
martin.....
Hi Erik,
My name is Cary Orange and I'm searching for the BASIC listing of an
old computer game called DUKEDOM. I used to play this game many years
ago when I owned a TRS-80 Model I computer. I'd like to find the game
and port it to the PalmOS platform in an effort to revive the game.
Based on input I've received from one of the game's contributors I
think it might be printed in the February, 1980 issue of Creative
Computing magazine (1980, Volume 6, Number 2). If not to inconvenient
would you mind verifying this BASIC listing in your archived issue of
the magazine? I'd really be interested in getting a hard/soft copy of
the program listing to this game. Many Thanks!
Sincerely,
Cary Orange
caryo(a)yahoo.com
Hi,
An Able-computer controller is offered on Ebay
http://cgi.ebay.de/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=2737483185&category=1247
If I remember well, this could be a combined disc/tape-controller...
does anyone have more details?
Is the rather high price justified by some special features?
Thanks,
Frank
Radio shack dot com or whatever they a calling
themself this week - has old and new owners manuals on
thier web site.
i was surprised to find the manual for thier 8 track
recorder and the r2r they sold long ago.
Bill
Message: 16
Date: Tue, 24 Jun 2003 07:48:52 -0700
From: Krome Mail <kromemail(a)shaw.ca>
Subject: Realistic MPA-35 owners manual
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Reply-To: cctech(a)classiccmp.org
Hi Chris,
If you still have an owner's manual for
the Realistic
MPA-35
I would sure appreciate a copy. Thank you. T. Moore
--__--__--
Hi,
Another one for the sake of the archives more than anything - a few more
non-Torch docs that turned up amongst my haul of Torch stuff, some of which are
likely quite (very?) rare...
Acorn Stuff
---------------
Acorn Econet system user guide
Acorn Atom user manual
Acorn Basic manual (4K integer Basic; manual is dated 28/7/1980)
Acorn Technical Manual - dated 1979, for a 6502-based SBC. Display is quoted in
the manual as being 9 digits with the leftmost one unused, which may identify
the machine. Possibly a System 1-4 ??
Acorn 6809 users manual - dated 1980, this looks to be for a SBC a little more
'modern' than the one above. There are fragments of schematics in the manual,
plus an overview of the board layout, construction guide, monitor ROM listing
etc. but no complete schematic.
A binder which looks to have been Acorn internal. Has the following A4
sections:
Acorn DOS manual
Acorn 6502 ADE
Econet v1 technical manual
Econet v1 user manual
Econet v2 user manual
Econet harddrive mods (schematics and notes)
Econet specification document (marked as provisional)
Atom Disc Pack construction notes, schematics etc. (anyone got a dump of the
ROM to go with this?)
Atom "Disatom Super ROM" specifications doc - whatever one of those is!
Atom Toolkit and Monitor ROM manual, by a P. T. Blenkinsop (written beneath
it says "with apologies to M Bates and Steve Wozniak" :)
Acorn System 5 Handbook
Acorn documentation - more official-looking stuff:
BBC OS v1 spec,
BBC disc interface details,
Document called "A redefinable telesoftware format" - was that what went on
to become prestel in the UK?
Internal document announcing a BASIC interpreter being ready for the systems
3/4/5/6/8. I wonder what the systems 6 and 8 were? Far as I know only 1-5
existed in the wild, followed by the Atom and the BBC - with the Proton
evolving into what became the BBC. Maybe 6 was the Atom - but the document goes
on to specifically mention the BBC as a seperate case, so that wasn't a System
8... and where did 7 go? Curious! :)
BBC micro speech system user guide.
Internal doc detailing Acorn DOS entry points for the system 3, 4 and Atom.
"Operating Instructions for the Progressive Establishment Testing System for
the BBC Microcomputer". Blimey. Documentation for a hardware unit that hooked
up to the BBC machines in order to perform hardware tests on them for engineers
by the looks of it. Wonder if any of the hardware still exists? :-)
"Operating Instructions for the Final Inspection and Test System for the BBC
Microcomputer". Blimey again. Did these ever even see the light of day? Seems
to have been another hardware unit for use by field engineers but I've never
heard of it before.
BBC 1MHz bus spec document.
AIM 65 Stuff
------------
AIM 65 Schematic
Forth user's manual
PL/65 user's manaul
Monitor program listing
Basic language reference manual
Instant pascal user's manaul
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On Jun 25, 18:21, Jules Richardson wrote:
> CP/N hard disk utilities (single floppy, hand-written label)
> Torch hard disk utilities (single floppy, again just hand-written
label)
Hmm... Could I get a copy of those? I think I have the correct MCP ROM
somewhere here.
> Floppy with a Torch label on saying "spell binder" - no idea!
Spellbinder was a CP/M word processor similar to Wordstar. The only
other time I've seen it in the flesh was on an Exidy Sorcerer.
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
Hello,
I am restoring an 11/70 with a BA11-F chassis which uses 17 4.7"x4.7"x1.5"
115v muffin fans (as they all do) and need to find a good source for
replacements. Does anyone have any suggestions?
--tnx
--tom
Hi all,
Picked up a huge pile of old Torch hardware, software and manuals from someone
today. The guy worked for the company who took things over when Torch went
under way back when, and grabbed whatever he could when that company eventually
disappeared too. Anyway, I've got a nice pile of spares, schematics and the
like, and probably the most complete set of Torch documentation anywhere...
I'll stick the documentation and software in a seperate mail and just list the
hardware here. Everything needs a damn good cleaning and checking over before I
attempt to see what still works! Pictures can follow in a few days, but I'm
reorganising all my data at the moment and don't want to confuse myself by
adding anything halfway through :-)
Oh, I don't know the damn naming convention for D-type connectors, so
everything's a 'D' type to me. Apologies in advance...
Triple X 'prototype'
--------------------
Supposedly this was a prototype of a Triple X machine used in-house by Torch,
presumably for development purposes. I'm not 100% convinced yet but I haven't
yet been inside it! It's built into two seperate grey metal cases (hard &
floppy disk / CPU) - certainly not production-quality either, but the official
badging suggests it perhaps wasn't a homebrew project either, so who knows.
- Top metal case houses hard disk and floppy in metal case; rear just has
power and 50-pin SCSI connector.
- Bottom slice is the CPU box; there's a standard-looking Triple X keyboard
attached (cable runs through a hole in the case). The front has power LED only
and stuck-on label reading: "XXX iss.2 in disguise" :-) The rear has the
following with 'proper' lettering:
50 pin SCSI running to disk unit
Low-volts out (via bodged connector) for disk unit
"Video" (small hole in case only)
"Torchnet" (small hole in case only)
"Disc interface" (blanked off)
RS423 (25-w D female)
Parallel (25-w D female)
RGB (round DIN, 8 pin)
Cassette (round DIN, 7 pin)
Reset button (I assume)
Mains AC input
Power switch
"Torch Hard Disc"
-----------------
This thing weighs one hell of a lot! 2-tone brown metal case, with inbuilt
floppy, hard drive, and monitor. Data sticker gives the model as a C520 and the
serial as 84472645
Power supply is in a seperate unit (see below) but still feeds mains into the
machine via seperate plug by the looks of it, presumably for the display
circuitry.
Back-left corner:
Keyboard socket (15-w D female)
Reset (??)
Contrast ?
Back-right corner:
Mains in (probably!) - from power supply unit
19-w huge round connector to mate with power supply
Rear:
UHF socket
RGB (6-way DIN)
Cassette (7-way DIN)
Analogue (15-way D female)
RS423 (25-way D female)
Printer (25-way D male)
The keyboard has a regular spacebar plus a small key to the right labelled
'exact space' - curious.
"Torch HD Power Pack"
---------------------
For use with above machine. Guess they ran out of space in the main case :)
Has the following:
Mains AC input
Mains AC out (I assume??) via short trailing lead
19-way round connector to mate with above machine on a short trailing lead
Power switch (likely!)
Reset button (?? If so, what's the pushbutton on the main system unit for?)
Torch-725
---------
This may be a Quad X machine; if so then there aren't many of them left I
expect! It is according to the previous owner, but it doesn't say so on any of
the badging. Case is grey steel, about the size/shape of an IBM XT case. Data
sticker gives the model as a "725/U" and the serial as "84022913"
At the front we have:
2 x slimline 5.25" floppy drives
Hard disk led visible through window cut in the case
Power led
Whilst at the rear:
Reset button
Keyboard socket, 15-w D female
Phone-jack type connector (Mouse? Or alternate keyboard socket - I have
keyboards with both type of connector? Or modem?)
"RS423 #1" - 25-w D female
Parallel - 25-w D male
Blanked ports: "RS423 #2", "RS423 #3", "Extension bus", SCSI, X25
Analogue port, 15-w D female
Torchnet port, 5-w DIN
RGB 6-w DIN
Mains in
Mains out
Switch (power I assume!!)
Large grille for cooling fan
Monitors
--------
One of these should work with the 725 above, another with the Triple X
'prototype' I guess.
Single Torch Triple X 13" monitor, model CM13. 8-pin DIN input.
Two Torch Triple X 10" monitors, model CM10. 8pin DIN input
Unknown 14" RGB monitor, 15-w D type female input. Likely nothing to do with
the Torch systems but I guess it'll probably work given a suitable cable.
Keyboards
---------
One of these for torch-725 presumably, which doesn't have an 'obvious' keyboard
like the C520, and doesn't have one attached like the 'prototype'.
Four Triple X keyboards; with 6-pin phone-type flat plugs on trailing leads
and 6-pin phone-type flat sockets on back of the keyboard (for mice?)
Two Cherry-made XT-style keyboards with 15-pin D-type male connectors on
trailing leads.
Mice
----
I believe the previous owner said the C520 was too old to use a mouse, but the
other two systems should support them I think.
Anyway, I have six Triple X mice using 6-pin phone-type flat plugs. The cover
for one came off and fell down a convenient drain though - whoops... (there are
only ever drain covers around when you have something useful to drop down them)
Misc
----
Torch Z80 disc pack - grey metal case for two half-height 5.25" drives; it's
been stripped of drives but I think the psu is intact. I believe this needs an
interface card (which may well be amongst the cards listed below)
Triple X PSU (or so I was told; not having a 'genuine' Triple X I don't
know!)
Box of genuine spare Quad X PAL chips and eproms
Box of spare Triple X PAL chips and eproms
Box of spare BBC/Torch eproms (presumably for 68k boards etc.)
Floppy drives
-------------
The owner was having a clear-out so I took a few off his hands - a couple I
noticed were Torch-labelled.
Four full-height IBM XT style units
Five half-height units hand-labelled as 1.2MB
Seven half-height units hand-labelled as 360KB
Eighteen (!) unknown capacity drives.
Five of the unknowns are still bagged and unused.
Hard drives
-----------
Unknown models / capacities as of yet... not had time to delve into them.
Four 5.25" MFM drives, one labelled as Quad X and may still have an OS
intact.
Three 3.5" MFM drives.
Tape drives
-----------
Possibly for Quad X? Anyway, there are a couple of 5.25" HH units; not given
them more than a brief glance yet so not sure of manufacturer / capacity /
interface.
Spare boards
------------
Couple of boxes of spare boards came with everything... all connectors are
dual-row IDC type sockets unless I say otherwise :)
Two Torch Computers 68000 boards. 68k and Z80B CPUs on board, 4 pin
single-row connector (power I expect) and 40 pin data connector. I believe
these plug into the BBC machines so that they can run Torch's version of CP/M?
One is a later model than the other and badged as an Atlas board.
Three Torch Z80 Communicator boards. Z80A CPU on board, 40 pin data
connector. Another BBC plugin? The owner had hundreds of them apparently and
most of them went to landfill a while ago.
Unknown Torch Z80 card. 40-pin connector at one end, 26-pin connector at the
other. Z80A CPU and SIO chips on board, plus 6522A and an 8255 chip. ROM is
Torch labelled as CCCP V1.02
Three Torch internal (internal to what, though?) modems - 40-pin connectors,
plus 4-pin single-row for power. Several 40-pin chips: Z80 PIO, MC6803,
EF68A21P. ROM is Torch, labelled as "ADM5 2.1". Also a TM2016 chip on board
(memory I believe) and a 28-pin IC branded as "world-chip".
Two oddball "modems". I don't even know if that's what they are :-) 2x 4-pin
single-row connectors, 14 pin single-row connector, then a long trailing lead
terminated in a 5 way rounded jack plug. I've not seen those jack plugs on
anything before, but it's possible old UK phone exchange equipment might have
used them - anyone? There's very little in the way of logic on the boards -
it's all analogue. Boards are 6" x 7". Trailing lead goes into a large white
plastic 'box' in one corner of the board. On top of this, apparently as an
afterthought, is a glued-on smaller black box out of which come two leads that
connect back to pins on the 14 pin connector. Hardware hacking at its best...
Right, the following appear to all be protocol convertor / interface boards for
various storage devices. All are on boards around 6" x 8" in size, and all have
a single 4 pin power connector (I may have manuals for all of these; I haven't
got that far yet!):
Seven issue 3 Torch manta boards, for converting between SCSI and floppy
interfaces.
Single issue 5 Torch manta board
Four OMT boards (model 5200) with a 50 pin connector, 2x 34-pin connectors
and 2x 20 pin connectors. SCSI (or SASI?) to MFM disk?
Single OMT board with a 50 pin connector, 34-pin connector, and 4x 20 pin
connectors. maybe SCSI (or SASI?) to MFM disk again?
Four Xebec boards with a 50 pin connector, 3x 20 pin connectors and single
34-way edge connector.
Single Xebec board with a 50 pin connector, 2x 20 pin connectors and single
34-way edge connector.
Two Archive boards with a 50-pin connector at one end and a 50-way edge
connector at the other.5 LEDs by the power connector. Tape interface of some
sort, presumably?
Single Emulex board, 2x 50-pin connectors at opposite ends of the board. Hmm.
Tape again?
Single Adaptec board, 2x 50-pin connectors at opposite ends of the board.
Single Western Digital board (labelled WD1002-05), 2x 34-pin connectors, 3x
20-pin connectors, and a singe 40-pin connector. Only thing I can think of with
40 pins is IDE and it's too early for that I'm sure (last chip date is 1983)
I *think* that's all of it, for now. The guy I got these from had several rooms
piled up with stuff; he said he used to have a few 'proper' Triple X systems
and is surprised he threw them out, so they may still be lurking somewhere.
Same goes with other genuine Torch spares, drives, software, cables etc.
There was a Quad X-on-a-card which I had my eye on but the guy still uses some
of the other cards in the rack for various things, so I couldn't get hold of
that.
List of manuals and software to follow...
cheers
Jules
________________________________________________________________________
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On Jun 25, 19:30, Jules Richardson wrote:
> Acorn Technical Manual - dated 1979, for a 6502-based SBC. Display is
quoted in
> the manual as being 9 digits with the leftmost one unused, which may
identify
> the machine. Possibly a System 1-4 ??
No, it wasn't a System device. That's the original Acorn SBC, I think.
I've got the matching User's Manual.
> Acorn 6809 users manual - dated 1980, this looks to be for a SBC a
little more
> 'modern' than the one above. There are fragments of schematics in the
manual,
> plus an overview of the board layout, construction guide, monitor ROM
listing
> etc. but no complete schematic.
Mine has a fold-out circuit diagram inside the back cover.
> Atom Disc Pack construction notes, schematics etc. (anyone got a
dump of the
> ROM to go with this?)
Yes :-)
> Document called "A redefinable telesoftware format" - was that what
went on
> to become prestel in the UK?
The same basic CET (Council for Educational Technology) format was used
for BBC Telesoftware (on Ceefax), Prestel (Micronet800, Viewfax258 etc)
and a few bulletin boards (including Acorn's own Support Information
Database -- SID). It went through a few revisions, but the basics
didn't change. I wrote some software for that.
> "Operating Instructions for the Progressive Establishment Testing
System for
> the BBC Microcomputer". Blimey. Documentation for a hardware unit
that hooked
> up to the BBC machines in order to perform hardware tests on them for
engineers
> by the looks of it. Wonder if any of the hardware still exists? :-)
Probably. I'll pay money for one -- I still have most of the other
Acorn test equipment. A PET was used to diagnose faulty systems; it
could deal with pretty dead machines and/or some obscure faults --
though an experienced engineer could usually do it just about as fast
without it.
> "Operating Instructions for the Final Inspection and Test System
for the BBC
> Microcomputer". Blimey again. Did these ever even see the light of
day? Seems
> to have been another hardware unit for use by field engineers but
I've never
> heard of it before.
Yes, I've got one -- and every Beeb I've ever repaired has passed the
FIT. You need the software for it; I think the basic A version is
printed in the manual but there's a B version as well (is that also in
the manual? I've got one, but not to hand). Every Approved Service
Centre was required to have one.
There's a companion set of "Test Procedures For The ..." 6502 2P, Z80
2P, Prestel adaptor, Teletext adaptor, ... and other test equipment
such as the Watchdog for an Electron and a PIT (sort of combined
FIT/PET) for later machines, and an Econet test box.
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
On Jun 25, 18:19, Jules Richardson wrote:
> Picked up a huge pile of old Torch hardware, software and manuals
>from someone
> today.
A nice haul :-)
> The keyboard has a regular spacebar plus a small key to the right
labelled
> 'exact space' - curious.
Probably to generate a "non-break space" -- character 160 (0xA0) in ISO
8859 -- used for tables and things where you don't want the text
formatter to change the spacing between words.
> Torch Z80 disc pack - grey metal case for two half-height 5.25"
drives; it's
> been stripped of drives but I think the psu is intact. I believe this
needs an
> interface card (which may well be amongst the cards listed below)
Unusual. Production ones were brown. They have a 34-way ribbon cable
which plugs in to the Beeb disk interface, and carries the standard
SA400-style interface signals. No other interface required.
> Two Torch Computers 68000 boards. 68k and Z80B CPUs on board, 4 pin
> single-row connector (power I expect) and 40 pin data connector. I
believe
> these plug into the BBC machines so that they can run Torch's version
of CP/M?
Not CP/M, that was the board below. These would run a Unix derivative,
I think.
> Three Torch Z80 Communicator boards. Z80A CPU on board, 40 pin data
> connector. Another BBC plugin? The owner had hundreds of them
apparently and
> most of them went to landfill a while ago.
Sounds like the normal Torch Z80 board, to run CPN.
> Unknown Torch Z80 card. 40-pin connector at one end, 26-pin
connector at the
> other. Z80A CPU and SIO chips on board, plus 6522A and an 8255 chip.
ROM is
> Torch labelled as CCCP V1.02
That's definitely to run CPN. CCCP is the Console Command <something>
Processor part of CPN; usually paired with MCP on the Beeb. The 8255
and the 6522 probably make up the Tube interface.
CPN, by the way, isn't CP/M. It looks and feels similar, and *some*
CP/M software is compatible, but not all -- the memory map is
different.
> Three Torch internal (internal to what, though?) modems - 40-pin
connectors,
> plus 4-pin single-row for power. Several 40-pin chips: Z80 PIO,
MC6803,
> EF68A21P. ROM is Torch, labelled as "ADM5 2.1". Also a TM2016 chip on
board
> (memory I believe) and a 28-pin IC branded as "world-chip".
TM2016 is a 2K x 8 (bytewide) static RAM, pin-compatible to a 2716
EPROM (except for the /WR line, of course). Your "World Chip"" will be
an AMD7910 (or possibly AMD7911) FSK modem chip. It was very clever
for it's day; it does a range of baud rates and Bell and CCITT tones.
Over here, it was used in Miracle Technology modems and many others in
the mid '80s. It goes up to 1200 baud half duplex or 300/300 full
duplex.
> Four Xebec boards with a 50 pin connector, 3x 20 pin connectors and
single
> 34-way edge connector.
> Single Xebec board with a 50 pin connector, 2x 20 pin connectors
and single
> 34-way edge connector.
SASI interfaces to ST412-compatible drives. The 50-pin connector is
the SASI (predecessor to SCSI) interface; the 34-pin is the drive
control bus, and the 20-pin connectors are the data lines.
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
Right, I also have a Hitachi DK512S-17 with 170MB, this drive is just SMD, not SMD-E.
There are even specs on
http://www.mbiusa.com/dk512s.html
or www.pc-disk.de
Pierre
cctech(a)classiccmp.org schrieb am 25.06.03 01:17:15:
>
> On 2003.06.24 21:36 Ethan Dicks wrote:
>
> > Are there any non-SMD-E drives in the the 5.25" size?
> I have a Hitachi 514s of around 380 MB and a Seagate 1.2 GB 5.25" disk.
> I think they are both SMD-E.
>
> If anybody has any detaild information about the Seagate ST-41097J or
> ST-41201J bejond "st41097j.txt" or "st41201j.txt" please share it with
> me. I have no description of the DIP switches, so I can't use the drive.
> But a 1 GB 5.25" SMD disk would be so nice on one of my PDP-11s or
> VAXen...
> --
>
>
> tsch??,
> Jochen
>
> Homepage: http://www.unixag-kl.fh-kl.de/~jkunz/
______________________________________________________________________________
UNICEF bittet um Spenden fur die Kinder im Irak! Hier online an
UNICEF spenden: https://spenden.web.de/unicef/special/?mc=021101
On an Seagate ST-506 (not the interface, the reel drive), I got from a Mac, I found the same strange connector. The PCB-Board had a MAC-Logo on it.
What interface could this really be ?
Pierre
cctech(a)classiccmp.org schrieb am 25.06.03 01:16:06:
>
> it looks like a mac floppy drive to the outside world, that's the
> interface, it emulates a BIG floppy :)
>
> At 03:45 PM 6/24/03 -0500, you wrote:
> >All,
> > a friend of mine had a question this group is probably best to
> > answer:
> >
> >-------------
> >I am trying to determine the type of interface on an old Rodime 552
> >drive. It has 26 pins. SCSI has 50. IDE has 40. The old MFM used
> >two cables, not one so I don't think it's MFM. I did find a listing for
> >it at one of the surplus places in a table which lists interfaces, but all
> >it said was "26 pin". I'm trying to figure out if the thing is
> >actually one of the more common interfaces with a funny connector--perhaps
> >all the GND pins have been combined into one reducing the pin count.
> >
> >This model of drive is found in the old Apple Hard Disk 20, which was the
> >ancient floppy drive interface external hard drive used on Mac 128Ks and
> >512Ks before the Plus with SCSI came out.
> >----------------
> >
> > any help for him? Thanks in advance,
> > - Mark
____________________________________________________________________________
Jetzt bei WEB.DE FreeMail anmelden = 1qm Regenwald schuetzen! Helfen
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Nope, this bug existed on the P60 and P66.
Pierre
cctech(a)classiccmp.org schrieb am 25.06.03 01:12:46:
>
> Jim wrote:
> > Anyone interested in an AST Manhattan server? Dual p-90s. It'll be on
> > topic in two years.
>
> Now that's reminded me: has anybody kept any Pentiums with the divide
> bug? Weren't they Pentium-90s?
>
> --
> John Honniball
> coredump(a)gifford.co.uk
______________________________________________________________________________
UNICEF bittet um Spenden fur die Kinder im Irak! Hier online an
UNICEF spenden: https://spenden.web.de/unicef/special/?mc=021101
New listings on the site - www.rdrop.com/~jimw
shipping status: trip into town this past weekend got nuked, but will be
in the 'big city' this coming Monday/Tuesday (business stuff - can't shift
this one) so will be hitting shippers then.
-jim
---
jimw(a)agora.rdrop.com
The Computer Garage - http://www.rdrop.com/~jimw
I've been to Al's repository on spies.com and found a few documents,
but I'm looking for some info on a variety of Emulex disk controllers.
The level of detail I'm at is what controllers support which drives
and emulate which DEC interfaces...
I.e. - I have an SC21 on the way that emulates an RH11/RH70 and lets me
talk to a variety of SMD drives as if they were RM02/RM03/RM05/RM80
drives. I also have a QD34 that was an entire Pound that I'd like to
press into service, but I have no cables... I was contemplating removing
the I/O transition board and fabricating a "standard" A&B cable connector
interface (60 pin/multi-26-pin).
I'm also curious to get a reference to other controllers in case I
see them float by... most of the ones for sale lack specifics due to
seller ignorance.
Thanks,
-ethan
Hello - I was given your address as I have a Zenith Easy PC that I want
to give to a good home. I have continued to use it for various projects
even though I have a Dell XP for most activities. I have all the books
that came with it; first choice software and also an Epson printer for
both continuous forms and singles. That I would like to sell. Would
like to hear from an interested person - otherwise, it will be going to
Goodwill who will probably dump it. Thanks. Jean in N. Carolina
Has anyone on this list been having problems with the Ebay Search
Engine within the last week or so?
Wildcard searches, typically using two wildcards, are not working for me
anymore, typically returning 0 hits. Apparently others have been having
some problems, as seen on the Ebay discussion boards.
Ebay tech support is being less than helpful. "Well, it works for us".
Please reply off list (although I know this will now start an Ebay sucks
thread).
William Donzelli
aw288(a)osfn.org
Hi All,
I have a project in mind that I'll be using a High Density (1.2Mb)
floppy drive for. But it's going to take some tinkering with the jumpers to
make it work and I'll need a manual for it. Does anyone know if where I can
locate a manual for any of the HD drives on-line or does anyone have a
manual (or copy) that they're willing to part with? I haven't decided on
any particular model or brand of drive and I have access to hundreds of
different ones so I expect that it would be easier to find a manual and
then find a drive to match it rather than vice versa.
Joe
These are available, $5 each + shipping or trade for older CPU processors.
Nicolet NICE in circuit emulator for the Z80. Nice hard case with manual,
no software.
Norton trouble shooter software version4.5 on 5 1/4" floppies, with manual
Datarase II UV EPROM eraser with power supply.
Thanks Norm
With all this talk about newer gear - i thought
i'd post a want for a p1 machine.
i am looking for a "cheap" dual cpu card for the
compaq prolient 1500 server i have.
compaq uses a card that holds the simm's and cpu.
i have the single cpu card but it only allows a 90 mhz
p1 - the dual card allows faster cpu's and will work
with a single cpu.
Bill