Some days I feel like ?Doc Brown?, wondering where I parked the DeLorean.
?
YES ... connecting your HP 9000 to your private LAN would be useful.
ThinNet = 10-Base-2 = 10 MB Ethernet over RG-58/U 50 ohm coaxial cable.
The Series 360 workstation should also have an AUI port (15-pin D-subminiature with locking mechanism option).
?
I would recommend an AUI transceiver to 10-Base-T media converter (UTP with 8-pin modular jack). Black Box, Unicom, and other brands are available.
https://www.omnitron-systems.com/flexpoint-10-aui-media-converter.php
You did not mention the Operating System (OS) that you have installed on this HP 9000 series 360. HP-UX was the standard OS offering 30 years ago, when I went thru HP?s one month of classroom training on HP9000 hardware, networking, & HP-UX.
https://www.hpmuseum.net/exhibit.php?class=1&cat=40
You will need the Ethernet network driver installed for your OS, and standard TCP/IP tools (telnet, ssh, ftp, nfs, etc.).
greg
chicago
====
Date: Fri, 21 Feb 2020 10:19:40 -0800
From: Roger Addy <roger.addy at charter.net>
To: cctech at classiccmp.org
Subject: HP 9000 Series 360 Thin LAN
Hi All,
I am using an HP 9000 Series 360 with a "Thin LAN" coax card to run a
piece of equipment. The LAN connection is not currently being used.? I'm
wondering if it's possible to connect it to a modern ethernet network??
If so, what could I do with it? I found an adapter on Amazon. I would
like to be able to transfer files and possibly print.? The file systems
are not compatible except for maybe ASCII files.? Anyone have any
thoughts?? Even if I could transfer files into another HP 9000 system it
would be beneficial.
Thank you,
Roger A.
Thanks a million, Mike, for scanning and posting this.
I purchased this fix for my Altair way back when for $15, and it?s been one of those things that I?ve never been able to find online.
I never purchased the Parasitic Engineering power supply fix, but I have found it online. The Parasitic Engineering clock fix has eluded me until now.
BTW, IIRC, the PE clock fix worked excellently and I never had any clock related issues after installing it. The S-100 bus, the weak power supply, not enough slots, all those wires on the bus, all gave me plenty of headaches, but the clock fix worked great!
smp
- - -
Stephen Pereira
Bedford, NH 03110
KB1SXE
> On Feb 22, 2020, at 1:00 PM, cctech-request at classiccmp.org wrote:
>
> Message: 15
> Date: Fri, 21 Feb 2020 21:25:45 -0600
> From: Mike Douglas <deramp5113 at yahoo.com>
> To: cctalk at classiccmp.org
> Subject: Re: Parasitic Engineering Altair Clock Fix Kit...
> Message-ID: <8F336A6C-BACB-44E7-B3D4-DFAA00D1E26F at yahoo.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
>
> I scanned my Parasitic clock mod documents and put them at the link below.
>
> https://deramp.com/downloads/altair/hardware/altair_8800_computer/Parasitic…
>
> Mike
>
> Date: Thu, 20 Feb 2020 17:26:26 -0800 (PST)
> From: Fred Cisin <cisin at xenosoft.com>
> To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts"
> <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
> Subject: Re: Parasitic Engineering Altair Clock Fix Kit...
> Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.2002201714270.19282 at shell.lmi.net>
> Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed
>
> Howard Fullmer created a "beefier" power supply for the Altair. Ed
> Roberts said that people selling aftermarket peripherals were "parasites",
> so Howard named his company "Parasitic Engineering".
>
> He later produced the "Shuffleboard" (daughterboard) set for TRS80 that
> changed the memory map to be CP/M compatible, and an adapter
> (daughterboard) to change the exp-ansion interface to support 8" single
> density. (4th West Coast Computer Faire 1979)
>
> He and George Morrow put out early proposals for standardizing S100.
>
> Later, he was chief engineer for Morrow.
>
> He is no longer at the same addresses in north Berkeley and Albany.
> I heard a rumor that he had died, but I have been unable to find more
> information. George Morrow, who would know, is also dead.
>
> --
> Grumpy Ol' Fred cisin at xenosoft.com
It appears that he died on 4/25/96 at age 48. His last address was in Hayward.
-W
Hi,
Does anyone happen to have the instructions for this kit? I would really
appreciate a scan if you do.
Also looking for a 1975ish GE Porta-Color television (borrow, rent or buy)
for VCF East.
Thanks,
Bill Sudbrink
Heard of death today of Larry Tesler, pioneer worker at Xerox Parc. He
advanced the era of human-computer interaction. He 'created' copy-
and-paste and cut-and-paste which made everyday computing in DOS-age easier
before GUI-age made mouse-driven commands easier on computer users. Early
pioneers are leaving us and I state their drive to innovate to advance
computer-use easier is being lost.
Happy computing all.
Murray ?
Seems like with any system affected by Dallas rtc leaks it's make sense to
refab some clone boards we could move our surviving parts to. Is anyone
already doing this? It's sad to see the fewer working Amigas and others
dying.
Please make sure your messages to CCTalk have a Subject: line, otherwise
they end up being 'un-clickable' in the archive, like this:
http://www.classiccmp.org/pipermail/cctalk/2020-February/date.html
It's possible to hand-edit the URL's to see them, but it's a PITA!
Noel
Looking for a DECMATE (VT-278 model) RX278 Floppy Drive Interface Connector
cable, part number is RC26N-2L It's a 37 male-25 pin male cable.
Here is photo I took of one (not mine)
https://www.vintagecomputer.net/digital/DECmate/DECMATE_VT278_PortsDriveCab…
I have the pinouts for the 37-pin end but not the 25-pin end. If no one
has a cable I can do a continuity test of the cable next time I have access
one, but it's not easily available.
I am located near Philadelphia.
Thanks
Bill
Does anyone have an -11/24 in a BA11-A 10-1/2" mounting box? If so, I'd love
some images of the internals, if possible!
I ask because the BA11-A doesn't use the usual MATE-N-LOC connector for
sending power to the CPU; instead it has bus bars, and in the -11/44 (the
usual denizen of this box), the KD11-Z CPU backplane has a Flexprint cable
which bolts to those, to carry the power.
The thing is that the -11/24 backplane uses the usual MATE-N-LOC connectors;
to run an -11/24 in that box (the manuals says that's the standard 10-1/2 box
for it) the prints show a special adapter plate: that's what I'd like to
get images of.
If anyone has a spare adapter plate, that would be even better; I'd love to
buy/trade it, if so. (I'm interested in running an -11/24 in the BA11-A since
in a BA11-L 5-1/4" box, the limited +5VB severely limits the amount of memory
one can have.)
Noel
would anyone happen to have a 12016A SCSI card? If so and you want to sell or trade for some other HP hardware, let me know.
Thanks
Jesse at cypress-tech.com
UniBone emulates now the M9312 bootstrap ROM card.
Each of the 5 ROMs can be loaded with MACRO11 listings files from
http://www.ak6dn.com/PDP-11/M9312/
The tricky bootvector redirection logic is also implemented.
The address to execute after power-on is given as symbolic MACRO11 label.
For demonstration the script "m9312+xxdp_dl0.sh" is given,
which boots into 11/34 console emulator, or auto-boots XXDP from RL02.
kind regards,
Joerg
Jerry Weiss <jsw at ieee.org> wrote:
> On 2/12/20 11:28 AM, Noel Chiappa via cctalk wrote:
>
> > > That fourth card (M7268) is apparently a connector card for the Q-Bus
> > > and drive bus.
> >
> > Yes, but actually there are 6 cards: the M7269 is a dual card which goes
> > into the QBUS backplane, and the M993-YA which goes into the first RK05,
> > to convert from the two flat cables which come from the M7268.
> >
> > > From: Al Kossow
> >
> > > Also, it is only 18 bits.
> >
> > Actually, only 16-bit DMA addresses, I'm pretty sure.
> >
> > Noel
>
> That's what is documented in Micronote #5. There is a comment in the
> 15-Dec-1994 DECUServe Journal that says it can be modified for 18 bits
> from Alan Frisbie.
Yes, it can, and it works well. I ran RSX-11M from RK05s on my 11/73 system.
I even managed to find the article I wrote, on a 1986 backup of an RSX-11
disk, now loaded on SIMH on my Alpha/VMS system. I have already sent a
copy of the RUNOFF file (and resulting text file) to Dave McGuire, who
tracked me down, and will do so for anyone else who would like it.
I also have the RKV11-D manual and print set, but they are buried in one of
the many boxes in my shop, so it might take a while to find them. If you
need them, let me know and I'll dig them out and scan them.
Alan "Packrat" Frisbie
Hi,
Does anyone here have a CDC 9270 (SMD HDD) status/control panel that I
could borrow to check whether the drive that I have thinks that it is OK?
alan
Two things:
1. Does anyone here have documentation for Fujitsu's M2372 SMD disk?
M2382 is on bitsavers, but there are some differences between it and the
M2372.
2. I removed the drive from the Sun Storage Pedestal chassis, so I could
see what status LEDs are turning on when I power it up. STS0 is solid
and STS3 is flashing. Is this some transitory state as the drive is
coming up or is this a fault indication? It has stayed in that state for
at least 10 min, so I presume it is a fault.
If I am reading the M2382 manual correctly and is is applicable to the
M2372, the fault "indicates the condition to Power Ready is not correct
or the drive detect the unexpected MPU interruption".
alan
Hello All,Recently I tried making some custom SCSI cable. In the past I have successfully made my own 50pin SCSI and Floppy cables with out much issue. However, I am finding it almost impossible to crimp the HD68 connectors on the cable. I have even tried a vise grip and I still couldn't get it to crimp all the way down. Anybody with some advice? Is there a trick I am missing? TiA.
A little while back I posted here because I needed help with analysing the
failure of the PSU from my VAXmate. Since then I have had some comments on
the reverse engineered schematic which I have now improved and which is
here:
https://rjarratt.files.wordpress.com/2020/02/h7270-control-pulse-width-modul
ator.png
Following advice from a list member, I have been looking at the 555 and the
PWM that control the switching transistor, using a bench power supply to
power the PWM directly (across pins 5 and 7). When I do this, I find that
Vref from the PWM, which should be 5V to power the 555, does not reach 5V. I
have tried removing the 555 from the circuit, and when I do this Vref goes
to the nominal 5V, once Vcc to the PWM is above 16V. However, if I put the
555 back in, then Vref only goes to 2V. I have socketed the 555 and tried
with two other brand new 555 chips, the result is the same.
It seems that just adding a 555 kills the Vref output of the PWM. It can't
be anything else in the circuit because everything else is still in circuit
when the 555 has been removed. Could the PWM be faulty? Perhaps it can't
provide enough current to bring Vref up to 5V once the 555 is in the
circuit?
Any suggestions gratefully received.
Regards
Rob
I've got a couple of Teac FD-54B's that appear to have problems with their
index sensors. Does anyone have any docs for these? The internet seems to
barely know they exist vs the FD-55, which has info everywhere. I'm thrown
off a bit by the 3 wire phototransistor (vs the common 2 wire ones) they
they use, and I haven't quite disassembled it enough to figure out a part #
for that.
Also, if anyone has a pair of spare black FD-55B, that'd be useful too.
Patrick Finnegan
Classic heavy duty HP Designjet 755CM C3198B? in search of a new home as
it's now one stop short of the e-waste people.
It's large? (handles a 36in roll) and has the usual DesignJet stand.???
I can even include some NOS ink cartridges.
It would need a horizontal belt as they deteriorate even without use but
otherwise in good shape; it was fully functional when I removed it from
service.
I'm not trying to sell it, I just hate to trash it.
Not easily shippable, it's located in the Santa Cruz area - I could
deliver it here in the bay area if someone wants it.
Steve
On this, the 74th anniversary of the unveiling of
the ENIAC, I've decided to post a couple of things
I've been working on. The first is the 3D model
of the ENIAC mentioned before. It's designed
using brlcad, from the Ballistics Research Lab.
It just seemed too appropriate to model it using
the tool devleoped where it lived. The
thingiverse link is:
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:4164825
The second thing is a draft of a chapter from a
book I'm in the very early stages of. It
describes the basic circuit designs used in the
ENIAC with SPICE simulations of them. The layout
and formatting are based on the old Army Technical
Manuals of the time.
http://cs.drexel.edu/~bls96/eniac/ch1.pdf
Enjoy,
BLS
P.S. Apologies if you got this multiple times; I've
posted it to a few lists I'm on.
Anyone here have a set of Sun external SMD cables (530-1079 and 530-1080) that they can loan or want to sell?
I ordered from a set from MemoryX at the beginning of Jan. They haven?t arrived and MemoryX isn?t answering my e-mail asking what?s up.
alan
Ok offer me offlist for our extra transistor unused? in box sealed in original cellophan6...
Have extra ge. G11a. First GE landmark transistor for counter and computer cicurits
Germanium Whisker Transistors
?
Robert Hall returned to General Electric Research Laboratories Schenectady just as Bell announced its point-contact transistor.??Hall had just graduated PhD from Caltech and had previously worked at the laboratories on a range of projects including the Harper North Wartime radar diode project. Dr Albert Hull was Assistant Director of the Laboratory. He was known for his collegial management style with a relaxed approach to the research agenda of his staff members. Hall recalls that Hull came in with the reprint of the Physical Review letters that announced the transistor [Bardeen 1948] and said ?Robert here?s an interesting development from Bell Laboratories. It looks like something pretty new and exciting. Would you like to look into it and see if there?s anything interesting there.? [Choi 2004]
General Electric had all the knowhow it needed to duplicate the Bell design quickly. North?s diode programme had diodes that could handle 100 volts back voltage which was state of the art at that time. (Purdue University produced the high back voltage germanium for the Bell point contact transistor.) North?s diode programme and related research ensured it had a manufacturing understanding of the key technologies:
High back voltage poly-crystalline germanium;
Doping;
Point contact design;
Welding or forming; and
Assembly and encapsulation.
Its first designs were crude with two pins for the collector and emitter with the base connection through the case in the manner of the Bell Type A. No socket was available and users were recommended to use a 5 pin subminiature tube socket using positions 2 and 3 for the collector and emitter and to create a base connection by inserting phosphor-bronze strips in positions 1 and 4 and bending them so they contacted the transistor case.
The transistors were known as germanium triodes or germanium whisker transistors. Two types were produced evolving from prototype coding through the familiar ?G? designation in use for its point-contact diodes and finally adopting RMA registration:
?
?
Prototype
G Series
RMA
Amplifier/oscillator
SX-4A
G11
2N30
Switching
Z2
G11A
2N31
Date
Up to 1951
1950 on
1952 on
?
The prototype numbers appear in early data sheets and in a General Electric price list dated June 1st?1951 in which the new SX-4A and Z2 transistors were priced at a massive $29 each.
The two transistors had the same mechanical and electrical characteristics but the switching transistor was tested for ?trigger action? or negative resistance. [General Electric 1950 courtesy Jack Ward]
>From 1952 the transistors had 3 pins with the base connection being soldered to the outside of the transistor?s case.
See data sheet ECG-3B.
Early General Electric G11 and G11A point-contact transistors.[Courtesy Jack Ward]
Production General Electric G11 point-contact transistor [Courtesy?Jan de Groot]
Any recent or other recommendations on shipping to Europe? Specifically
to Italy?
I have the packing arranged.? Item being shipped is an ASR33. budget
right now is a bit beyond what the buyer has, but I have gotten the unit
for him, and we need to figure how to get it there.
weight will be 75 to 100#.? Shipping from Los Angeles.? Doesn't
necessarily have to go express shipping, as long as the ride isn't too bad.
So far not a lot of options, but Fedex freight has been checked out.?
Just not sure of any other freight forwarders to use.
thanks.
Jim
> On Feb 13, 2020, at 7:35 PM, Timothe Litt <litt at ieee.org> wrote:
>
> ...
> Someone wrote a DECtape driver for VAX - I think Stan R., though it wasn't supported. DECtape controllers are odd devices - the TD10 is reasonably smart, but the others put realtime constraints on the drivers that could be hard to meet. Anyhow, by the time the VAX came out, TU58 and Floppies were cheaper and denser media.
TU58, denser perhaps, but vastly less reliable and utterly despised by pretty much everyone at DEC. Also very much slower.
I heard that the VMS DECtape driver was by Andy Goldstein. The report also mentioned that it supposedly did "overlapped seek", just as the TOPS-10 driver does, but unlike PDP-11 DECtape drivers. I never saw a system that actually had one, unfortunately.
paul
I have two Kaypro 2 computers, some disks and some documents that I?d like to sell.
$250 OBO takes the entire lot..
One of the computers worked the last time I set it up and tried it - a few years ago.
The other one had some problem with the disk drives and did not boot, IIRC.
If anyone is interested, they are available for local pickup or reasonable drive to a meeting point. I?m in Bedford, NH, just west of Manchester, NH.
smp
- - -
Stephen Pereira
Bedford, NH 03110
KB1SXE
Would anyone know whether there is a backplane wire list diagram anywhere for the RKV11-D Qbus RK05 controller
like the one on eBay a few days ago?
I didn't get that one but I have a pair of NOS H803 4x dual-height socket blocks kicking around that I guess
could be wire wrapped into a replica RKV11 backplane as a rainy day project, not that I have the special
module that replaced one of the Unibus boards but I'll keep looking. Info on this controller seems pretty
scarce apart from the description in one of the handbooks.
Thanks for any help,
Steve.
> From: Jay Jaeger
> Yeah, info does seem to be scarce. Not even in my LEVAX fiche set.
My fiche set has the Technical Manual, and also (in the wirelist
section) the wirelist.
Not sure how to get it to you, though. I stuck it in my industrial-grade
scanner at its highest resolution; no go. I suppose I could take photos
of it displayed on my fiche reader?
Or is there some device I can buy which is less than a zillion dollars which
can scan fiche? There are a number of things in my set (e.g. the BA11-N Tech
Manual) which aren't online, and would be useful to have.
> That fourth card (M7268) is apparently a connector card for the Q-Bus
> and drive bus.
Yes, but actually there are 6 cards: the M7269 is a dual card which goes
into the QBUS backplane, and the M993-YA which goes into the first RK05,
to convert from the two flat cables which come from the M7268.
> From: Al Kossow
> Also, it is only 18 bits.
Actually, only 16-bit DMA addresses, I'm pretty sure.
Noel
Interesting daughter board on the 4FDC in this ebay lot:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Vintage-Lot-of-2-Cromemco-S-100-Boards-Z80-ZPU-CPU-
4FDC-Floppy-Disk-Controller/202903187221?hash=item2f3df8ef15:g:kGQAAOSwhKZeQ
z9C
(sorry if you have to paste the URL back together)
I thought maybe it was the JVB FDCX4 but after looking at some pictures,
it clearly is not. Looks like it just adds a data separator to the 1771?
Anybody
have one of these?
Bill S.
I have two Kaypro 2 computers, some disks and some documents that I?d like to sell.
$250 OBO takes the entire lot..
One of the computers worked the last time I set it up and tried it - a few years ago.
The other one had some problem with the disk drives and did not boot, IIRC.
If anyone is interested, they are available for local pickup or reasonable drive to a meeting point. I?m in Bedford, NH, just west of Manchester, NH.
smp
- - -
Stephen Pereira
Bedford, NH 03110
KB1SXE
As seen on PDP-8 Lovers list:
> From: "Jones, Douglas W" <douglas-w-jones at uiowa.edu>
> To: PDP8-Lovers <PDP8-Lovers at dbit.com>
> Subject: [PDP8-Lovers] Book on punched cards
>
> A new book has come out that I helped create:
> Print Punch
> published by CentreCentre, London
> 40 pounds sterling for the special edition (print run, 100 books)
> 30 pounds sterling for the regular edition (print run, 700 books)
>
> Here is the publisher's book list:
> -- https://centrecentre.co.uk/collections/frontpage
>
> The book includes 178 images of punched cards from my collection, mostly featuring corporate logos or business forms from around the world. The expensive special edition differs from the regular edition only in: A different color of cover, the addition of a big fat rubber band, and the inclusion of an actual punched card from my stock of spare cards.
>
> The IBM archives also provided lots of content and there are some essays by others. It's a nice coffee table book, and a good way for me to make the content of my punched card collection more widely available.
>
> It definitely counts as an art book, not a technical reference, but still, it seems at least tangentially relevant here.
>
> Doug Jones
> jones at cs.uiowa.edu
>
> PS: They paid me, if you can call it that, with a few copies of the regular edition. I don't expect any royalty checks as a result of the astounding sales bump this e-mail will certainly produce as people rush to buy a useless but pretty book.
>
> PPS: Yes, if you really want to, you may forward this e-mail anywhere you want. Don't bother asking my permission.
I'm trying to non-destructively open up a MicroVAX 2000.
I've removed the bottom "dressing" section (which holds some of the I/O
connectors)? but the next step isn't obvious. None of the manuals I have
cover dismantling and the net doesn't have an IPB or similar available.
Other people have managed to get inside (I can see their results) so I
must be missing something obvious ...
Thanks.
Antonio
--
Antonio Carlini
antonio at acarlini.com
(resending as this appears to have gotten eaten last time...)
Hi all --
As the subject line says I've got an IBM Type 31 Alphabetical Duplicating
Keypunch sitting in my basement, in the Seattle area.
It's in well-loved but decent physical condition and appears to be
completely original. I have not powered it on (still has the original
selenium rectifiers in it, for one thing) but mechanically it seems fine.
No rust or obviously damaged parts, but it's clearly gotten a decent amount
of use since the 1930s.
It's really cool but it's not really something I'm interested in keeping --
if any of you are interested or know someone who is interested, please feel
free to make an offer. Due to the size and fragility of the item I don't
want to ship this thing.
Pictures are available here:
https://1drv.ms/u/s!Aqb36sqnCIfMo9BhHMhAok3F4cAInQ?e=EhXDPP
Thanks!
Josh
On 02/11/20 18:00, cctech-request at classiccmp.org wrote:
> Send cctech mailing list submissions to
> cctech at classiccmp.org
>
> To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit
> http://www.classiccmp.org/mailman/listinfo/cctech
> or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to
> cctech-request at classiccmp.org
>
> You can reach the person managing the list at
> cctech-owner at classiccmp.org
>
> When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific
> than "Re: Contents of cctech digest..."
>
>
> Today's Topics:
>
> 1. looking for: fairchild model 8200 manual (Adrian Stoness)
> 2. Opening a MicroVAX 2000 (Antonio Carlini)
> 3. RD53 failure modes (Carlos E Murillo-Sanchez)
> 4. PC3XC manual? (Paul Koning)
> 5. Re: Old IBM magnetic media (cctalk at emailtoilet.com)
> 6. Looking for info - Computer Extension systems WE-VM8E8 board
> (Bob Smith)
> 7. Re: RD53 failure modes (Fred Cisin)
> 8. IBM Type 31 Alphabetical Duplicating Keypunch available,
> Seattle area (Josh Dersch)
> 9. Re: IBM Type 31 Alphabetical Duplicating Keypunch available,
> Seattle area (William Donzelli)
> 10. Re: IBM Type 31 Alphabetical Duplicating Keypunch available,
> Seattle area (Tony Aiuto)
> 11. Re: IBM Type 31 Alphabetical Duplicating Keypunch available,
> Seattle area (Lyle Bickley)
> 12. Making use of Panda dist TOPS20 (David Griffith)
> 13. Re: Making use of Panda dist TOPS20 (Ethan Dicks)
> 14. Re: Opening a MicroVAX 2000 (Josh Dersch)
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Sat, 8 Feb 2020 18:50:25 -0600
> From: Adrian Stoness<tdk.knight at gmail.com>
> To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts"
> <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
> Subject: looking for: fairchild model 8200 manual
> Message-ID:
> <CAA3rs201WpX8iERnhTYv1EKksaR8-UTTHAPeTE6S1FieNY6N7Q at mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
>
> trying to find a manual for a fairchild universal counter timer model 8200
> circa 1968?
>
> got one i found like to see if i can get it working for the rack.
>
> can only find this sales catilog from 68
> https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Farchive.org%2Fdetails%2FTNM_In…
>
> https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fdrive.google.com%2Fopen%3Fid%3…
>
> https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fdrive.google.com%2Fopen%3Fid%3…
>
> hasnt been powered up since prolly 1986 has a tag on it about channel B not
> working.
> was found in a rack sitting out in 40below temps prolly been sitting there
> for 20-30yrs in a storage shed the guts are realy clean on it so proly has
> potential to get working again.
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 2
> Date: Mon, 10 Feb 2020 11:17:03 +0000
> From: Antonio Carlini<a.carlini at ntlworld.com>
> To: "General Discussion: On-Topic Posts"<cctech at classiccmp.org>
> Subject: Opening a MicroVAX 2000
> Message-ID:<7d2cf42b-03c1-b514-d8aa-b85c0af83695 at ntlworld.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed
>
> I'm trying to non-destructively open up a MicroVAX 2000.
>
>
> I've removed the bottom "dressing" section (which holds some of the I/O
> connectors)? but the next step isn't obvious. None of the manuals I have
> cover dismantling and the net doesn't have an IPB or similar available.
> Other people have managed to get inside (I can see their results) so I
> must be missing something obvious ...
>
>
> Thanks.
>
>
> Antonio
>
>
Antonio,
From memory, the 2000 case covers are really tight and may need a bit
of leverage to remove, assuming all the screws have been removed. Very
close fitting rfi shields + several years of light corrosion etc...
Regards,
Chris
Sir,
I have a great interest in collecting vintage media. I am also desperate to
get hold of 2321 artifacts. Please talk to me as soon as you can.
Many thanks, Peter VP
Hello,
definitely you should be able to fix it.
This kind of problem is caused by the missing thickness of the rubber
stoppers of the positioner, which became goo in the years.
You have two ways to solve this problem.
First of all, remove the disk top cover plate in clean room, locate the
positioner and note that is full of black goo. Remove it at best with
isopropyl alcohol, sticks, paper, whatever, but be SURE not to spurt /
touch on the disk surface.
After this:
- method 1, easier: locate two screws at the sides of the positioner coil
which hold on position left and right stoppers.
You should loosen the left one (head on the center of the disk) and move
just slightly to the right, then tight the screw again.
As you must repeat some times to find the right position, my advice is to
have a PSU connected to the disk, and try before really tightening the
screw if it is enough / too much / good.
In this way you compensate for the thickness of the missing rubber stopper,
but the head will receive some more shocks at start and during operations.
-method 2: you will replace the missing rubber with a new one. You should
find a piece of rubber sheet, thickness around 1mm. You cut a small chunk
and somehow glue it to the stoppers again.
Of course you need to clean it very well before, otherwise glue will not
adhere.
Let me know if you manage to fix it.
Andrea
I'm trying to wrap my head around getting Mark Crispin's Panda
Distribution of TOPS20 set up such that I can actually make use of a
TOPS20 environment. I keep finding lots of manuals through Google
searches, but I'm missing a few critical things. Things that are evading
me are as follows:
1) How do I get networking set up, preferably such that it'll work on a
host that's given a DHCP address that could vary? I'd like to be able to
ssh to a specific port and then be connected to a terminal on the emulated
machine.
2) How do I set or alter a regular user's disk quota?
--
David Griffith
dave at 661.org
A: Because it fouls the order in which people normally read text.
Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
A: Top-posting.
Q: What is the most annoying thing in e-mail?
I had an old IRA 7340 Hypertape cartridge. It is at the Computer Museum of
America. I still have a cartridge but don't know from where.
I just got some replacement strips for a 2321 Data Cell.
My Pro has a PC3XC 4-line serial interface, and I know I once had a manual for it because the driver code I wrote mentions it. But I can't find it -- it may have been lost or it may have been a DEC document I did not take with me.
Is there a PC3XC-BA programming manual anywhere?
paul
I have 3 of these omnibus boards, all fully populated with 8K 12 bit
words of 2102 static ram.
What I don't have is the documentation that describes the way the
jumpers need to be set up for each 8K field.
The set up seems to involves what looks like a 3 parallel 8 pin
sockets that look like one and a half 16 pin DIP socket.
Any hints or pointers toward docs would be greatly appreciated
THanks
bob