Hi All,
Digging through some more stuff. I found a DSD 4120 (NOT 4140) qbus floppy
controller connected to two half-height 5 1/4 mitsubishi 4853-1112U
flopppy drives. One of the floppy drives had a diskette that read:
Scotch 3M
744-0 Diskette
Single Head, Single side
soft sector, single density
A quick google didn't land any hits for the DSD 4120, but a few, including
bitsavers had info on the 4140, They appear to be very similiar, but with a
few differences. The 4140 is a RX02 controller.
Is this another RX02 clone?? It's a 5 1/4 " not 8" and the floppy drive itself
is capable of over 700MB.
Could this be a RX50 clone??
Anybody senn one of these, any info??
Thanks
Cheers
Tom
--
---
Please do not read this sig. If you have read this far, please unread back to
the beginning.
I am looking to purchase a Programmer and wonder if you could tell me the
type of device list such as 2716 thru 27c type and or flash.
Thanks for any help
>In our experience, wireless is fine for casual internet connections,
>thin clients (terminal services, citrix, rdp) but much too slow for
>anything that involves any level of data transfer. We sell and support
>medical software that transfers very large databases. I have lost count
>of how many offices have implimented wireless networks without checking
>with us first. They usually scream bloody murder when we inform them
>they will have to revert back to wired networks. It seems mostly the
>doctors brother-in-law reccomended wireless.
Its funny that you bring that up.
I recently started with a new client, who sells Medical software (patient
charting or something to that effect, don't know exactly, just started
and I don't have anything to do with the actual software).
They are pushing wireless... I just got of a 45 minute phone call trying
to get one of the wireless tablets to reconnect to the network. WLAN was
up just fine, but it wouldn't allow any IP traffic. And of course this is
real fun to debug over the phone, trying to tell a Dr how to check and
change the settings on a tablet that has only an onscreen tappable
keyboard.
I'm dreading my next phone call to him (he had to hang up and deal with
patients), as I'm having a bad feeling the WPA key got screwed up... he
will go NUTS trying to tap in the 61 character phrase I used as the key!
(I couldn't even get it right twice, I had to tap it into wordpad and cut
and paste into the WPA key fields).
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
Hi, Joe
I just stumbled across the EV-831 thread while looking for a solution to
my Tape problem here at Nassau County School Board. We have a number of
old EV-831 boards wih old Sankyo 1/4 inch tape drives and are trying to
set up the boards/tapes in machines with CD burners so that we can xfer
all the old archive tapes to CD's for back-up/disaster recovery. Trouble
is we have no SW or drivers that work with the EV-831.
Could you send me Zips of the disks/programs that you mentioned in the
thread.
My email is [ mailto:john.pitts@nassau.k12.fl.us
]john.pitts(a)nassau.k12.fl.us. This would be a tremendous help. We've been
struggling with this for a couple of weeks and are at the point that we
were going to use the old (1993-94) Xenix machines that originally had the
EV-831's in them and kermit the extracted files over to a new machine with
burner HW/SW.
Anyway, TIA.
John Pitts
Hardware Tech
Nassau County School Board
Fernandina Beach, FL
[ mailto:john.pitts@nassau.k12.fl.us ]john.pitts(a)nassau.k12.fl.us
Hi,
Apologies if I missed an earlier post, but what has happened please to the
cctalk archive for 2001? There was a lot of great stuff in there, all nicely
searchable by Google.
Regards,
John
So, now that I discover I had a TU80, not TU81 controller in my 11/750,
I'm looking for a KLESI Unibus card, aka M8739. If anyone has one, I'd
be willing to offer some money or a trade of some sort.
Pat
--
Purdue University ITAP/RCS --- http://www.itap.purdue.edu/rcs/
The Computer Refuge --- http://computer-refuge.org
Jay wrote on Fri, 2 Jul 2004 15:44:04
> I'm looking for the EMS rom for the HP-85A. Or better yet, has any progress
> been made in the project to clone the HP programmable rom module?
It's possible to build one using standard parts. I'm nearly done with a schematic.
To complete it, I need to borrow a module for a very short time. Does anyone
have one they'd be willing to loan (or willing to ring out a few paths)?
Bill
I thought someone here might have an interest in these:
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=2254407061
I certainly have to wonder about the history behind these cases...
Based on the description, the seller has more of them too.
-Toth
I have 8 UTP (RJ45) to Fiber (ST connectors) Token ring media converters
I'm looking to either trade for 8 10Base-T to 10Base-FL (ST connectors) or
sell for what I've got in them. I bought them for $10.00/ea late last year
>from someone who claimed they were Ethernet media converters. I picked
them up for a local non-profit school, but all the gear I've set up there
is Ethernet, so they certainly won't work for the intended application ;)
These came without power supplies, but need 9VDC @ 1000ma to 1500ma. I
tested one on a 1000ma supply, but I know some media converters used to
use 1500ma supplies. I also have 8 9VDC 1000ma power supplies and the
correct input connectors available for these units, but if there isn't any
interest I'm going to see if I can get credit for them, as they cost me
almost as much as the media converters.
I put up a photo that I got from the original seller of these units here:
http://www.techmonkeys.org/~tothwolf/classiccmp/foc3.jpg
-Toth
I've been in contact with someone who is looking to get rid of a large
collection of Sams Photofact folder sets in Akron Ohio. There are
approximately 1900 folder sets in 11 file cabinet drawers. If anyone is
interested, contact me off-list and I'll give you his email address. If
they were just a little closer, I'd certainly take them, but shipping from
Ohio would be expensive ;)
-Toth
I found about 5 Lisa's doing the clean-out of the two local warehouses here
in Houston. All had some type of problem but one and it's running SCO Xenix
V3.0 as it's OS. I hope to get all five working again. Anyone know how to
read the mfg. date of 4304 ?
Hi
Beside the limeaway, also put the board in a bath of
vinegar ( white distilled ) and water ( 50-50 ) for about
20 minutes. The potassium hydroxide soaks into the fiberglass
boards and will pop out again. Vinegar is one of those
acids that forms a vapor and can get inside of things.
This is also good because it will eventually evaporate.
When mounting new NiCads, put them in a plastic bag and
run single strand insulated wires from the battery to the
board ( you noticed how it went right through multi-strand
wire ).
We have this same problem in pinball machines. Also
replace any sockets that might be suspect and any dip
switches that are near.
Dwight
>From: "Joe R." <rigdonj(a)cfl.rr.com>
>
> It's causes by the Potassium Hydroxide electrolyte leaking out of the
>NiCads batteries. It forms a complex copper salt hence the greenish color.
>I've found that full strength Lime-Away will dissolve it. Use the liquid
>stuff, NOT THE GELL, put it on and leave it for a few minutes then brush it
>off with an old toothbrush while rinsing it under water. Dry well. Next
>time throw those old NiCads out and don't zap them to try and reuse them.
>When they start to fail it's time to get rid of them. If you don't they'll
>start leaking.
>
> Joe
>
>
>
>At 11:54 PM 7/6/04 +0100, you wrote:
>>Hiya all
>>I've a number of boards (old PC motherboards, VAXen bulkhead panels /
>>planars) where the NiCds have 'leaked', covering areas of PCB and
>>metalwork / screws with a greyish 'corrosion'. What is this, and how
>>does one clear the boards / metalwork to get rid of it and return to
>>nice & clean? On the VAX TOY batteries, the corrosion seems to have
>>followed one battery wire (black, -ve) to the molex connector,
>>corroding / coating that, and then spreading across the boards...
>>
>>ta
>>greg
>>
>>
>>
>
This is my latest project. I have an Emulex TC02 that I want to use with a
pertec formatted Qualstar tape drive, model 1260.
The TC02 is plugged into a Vax 4000/400, hobbyist openvms version 7.2. It
is curious but when I start the Vax it does not see the TC02, this is at
the console prompt stage, >>>> show dev does not list the tape controller,
but >>>> show qbus lists it as a tsv05. Is this correct?
Anyway when I boot the Vax VMS does list an MSA0: drive but it is not
online or available, just what does this mean?
I also have a Dilog DQ3153, but no cables to attach the drive.
Anyone have success with hooking a Qualstar to a Vax or PDP?
Doug
At 07:20 AM 7/7/04 -0700, you wrote:
>
>What I'd really like to get my hands on is one of those little printers
>that make wire numbering labels. The new ones are insanely expensive.
Why not just print them out in a small font and then stick them to the
cable with some kind of temporary glue and then put clear heatshrink over
the label and shrink it in place? (Avery self stick labels and Avery's
label software might be good to use for this.) FWIW a lot of the new cables
that I'm seeing simply print the label on a piece of plastic then then wrap
it on the cable and tie around the ends of it with lacing cord or plastic
tie wraps.
Joe
>
>g.
>
>
>
I have a large multi-tier printer stand on casters that I use for my HP
logic analyzer setup. 1631D analyzer, 9122 dual floppy drive, 2225 printer,
probe hangers, etc. It's nice to have on that stand because I can roll it
around the work area from system to system easily.
I would like to put a computer on that stand too, that has HP-IB interface
(all the gear above is HP-IB). The primary purpose of the computer is to
interface to the logic analyzer, but I will also use it for interfacing to
my Data I/O programmer, various DOS programs like IC stat lookup, etc.
My problem is I'm not that familiar with HP DOS machines. I have particular
requirements for this and I'm not sure what model to look for. Perhaps those
familiar with HP's DOS machine lineage can suggest a machine I should look
for. Here's the criteria:
1) It has to be an HP. My TI3100 would look out of place with all the HP
gear on the rack :)
2) It has to allow putting an 8 bit ISA HP-IB card in it (or dare I say
already support HP-IB)
3) It really needs 1mb of RAM for some of the programs I want to run on it.
4) DOS version needs to be 5.0 or better, would be nice if I could use the
free DR-DOS
5) It would have to have an external serial port
6) I would like to get it on the wireless network. I was thinking of using
the zircom parallel port adapter I have, and then getting an ethernet to
wireless bridge. Of course, I have to find DOS TCP/IP drivers for the
zircom, if such a thing exists. I'm open to options here.
7) Vertical space is a premium on the rack, so I would prefer something
without a full-size monitor, preferrably an all-in-one unit rather than
separate cpu, keyboard, monitor, etc.
8) Would need at least 40mb hard disk.
9) Need a somewhat standard size keyboard (this rules out my 200LX).
So far from my looking around, the HP 110 seems very close to what I'd want.
The small vertical height of the screen is a big plus, but, I really have to
have 80x24. Plus the 110 seems to be stuck with 256k ram and only DOS 2.11.
I would LOVE to use my HP-85 for this, but alas, it isn't going to be
running promlink anytime soon. Can anyone suggest a vintage PC machine for
this purpose?
Thanks!
Jay West
---
[This E-mail scanned for viruses by Declude Virus]
Hey Bill, I'll be looking for you at VCF east. I'm setting up a vendor
booth so if you get a chance come visit me. The booth will have a sign
saying "Technical Assurance Resources. I'm bringing a few items to sell,
but mostly I'll be looking for a buyer interested in purchasing my
entire lot of DEC and VAX stuff (over 5000 boards plus a whole lot more)
I'll be staying at the Holiday Inn and I'll be arriving on Thursday as
well. I hope to meet a lot of the people I've been dealing with. A lot
of names on this forum are very familiar! See ya there.
Thom
Hiya all
I've a number of boards (old PC motherboards, VAXen bulkhead panels /
planars) where the NiCds have 'leaked', covering areas of PCB and
metalwork / screws with a greyish 'corrosion'. What is this, and how
does one clear the boards / metalwork to get rid of it and return to
nice & clean? On the VAX TOY batteries, the corrosion seems to have
followed one battery wire (black, -ve) to the molex connector,
corroding / coating that, and then spreading across the boards...
ta
greg
Stumbled across a few free printing terminals today, if anyone is in
the right place and interested. Michigan State University's Salvage
yard had a few serial interface units of some sort, assorted cables,
three DEC Letterprinters and two Decwriter III's in their free pile
as of about 1:20 this afternoon. I grabbed one of each terminal,
a couple of serial line driver units, and a nice cart. I would have
taken all of them, but the truck was full. No guarantees they're
still there of course.
De
I have an ASR33 that exhibits the following symptoms in local
mode (I have not attempted to test online):
1) Paper will not advance (roller seems to move OK when turned
by hand)
2) Bell will not ring
3) When at the start of a line (carriage to the left) it will
over print several characters before it starts moving to
the right
4) Carriage returns very slowly and sometimes does not make it
all the way back
5) Filthy inside (although not as bad as when I got it... I've
vacuumed and blown a lot of crud out of it)
6) Smells a little funky... not the clean warm oil smell that
I remember from high school days
As well as being dirty, I suspect that it was improperly
lubricated by the previous owner as it seems to be particularly
sticky inside.
I also have a nearly new KSR33 from the same source that was
improperly handled to the extent that its plastic shell was
shattered (it was in a cardboard box with some newspaper, none
of the shipping bolts in place, and apparently roughly moved
around his ham shack). I have made no attempt to power up the
KSR (in case stuff got bent) but I think that it could be used
as a source of replacements if some of the parts of the ASR are
badly worn.
I would like to recruit 3 or 4 knowledgeable and highly motivated
classiccmpers (motivated by the prospect of DINNER and BEER on me)
at VCF East to completely tear down, clean, adjust, lubricate and
reassemble the ASR. I will supply all of the tools and materials
(unless you have special purpose tools that will help). I picture
a marathon operation, with the experts doing the disassembly,
assembly and adjustment work and me with a toothbrush and a pan of
Simple Green (or alcohol or kerosene or whatever solvent the experts
suggest) busily scrubbing parts as they are handed to me. With four
guys and one scrubber, could this be accomplished in a couple of
hours?
Why don't I do this myself?
1) I don't really have the space. Having the entire interior of a
hotel room to myself will be something of a luxury to me (I have
two kids). Or maybe I can ask Sellam for some space at the
festival and we can make it a spectator sport. It could even
become sort of a challenge...
"The crew at VCF East was able to rebuild an ASR33 in two hours,
how fast can the West or Europe do it?"
2) I don't have the unbroken periods of time. I have the fear that I
would get it all apart, have one of my all too frequent family
"emergencies" and then have to pack it up, resulting in lost parts
when I finally get back to it.
3) I'm a gutless wimp. If I get it apart, I'm not sure I could get
it all back together, even with the docs. I have original prints
of some of the docs and the rest in electronic form.
Email me if interested,
Thanks,
Bill
Looking for owner manuals for a DECstation 5000/125
TIA!!!
+++++++++++++++++++
Kevin Parker
Web Services Manager
WorkCover Corporation
p: 08 8233 2548
e: webmaster(a)workcover.com
w: www.workcover.com
+++++++++++++++++++
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Hello,
I saw your note from a google search that you were at one time
looking for TIL306 displays?
I have some TIL306 displays.
I'm looking for TIL308 displays. Do you have these?
I'll buy, sell trade the TIL306 for the TIL308.
Let me know,
Willie
/-------------------------------------------------------------------\
| Willie Flint willief(a)base-2.com |
| Base 2 Technologies, Inc. 253.437.1182 |
| 22342 68th Avenue South 253.437.1183 Fax |
| Kent, WA. 98032 www.base-2.com |
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Thanks for the positive response to my previous note
mentioning the necessity of getting gone a number of
classic computers.
I've put up a website where some of these can be seen,
along with a lot of other things. I'll be adding to
this site as time goes on....
http://www.geocities.com/vdw4sale/MoiPage.html
It's just a bit of the vast amount of 'stuff' I have!
Regards,
Vern
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On Jun 28, 13:16, Teo Zenios wrote:
> How often do you people use a head cleaner to keep your floppy drives
running
Never. You shouldn't need to clean the heads, in normal use. If you
do, you have a damaged diskette (or possibly a damaged head, which is
scraping oxide off your floppies) which you should track down, cut up,
burn, and discard.
Of course, sometimes oxide from a damaged floppy will stick to the
head, and that will then damage any other disks you put in that drive.
(or what do you use to clean them when they don't read disks
correctly)?
Cotton bud and iso-propyl alcohol. Head-cleaning disks don't do a very
good job, especially if the head is really dirty.
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
Since I'm going to be exhibiting, I'm interested in having a
lot of people show up for VCF East... general (or at least
technically inclined) public as well as the "usual suspects".
I noted that last fall's VCF West didn't show up on Slashdot
until Saturday at 2 PM. A number of people complained that
they would have attended with a little more notice. It did
show up on Wired on Thursday. Should we try to talk it up?
Is there a reason not to?
Bill
very cool! Thanks Gene
-----Original Message-----
From: Gene Buckle <geneb(a)deltasoft.com>
Sent: Jul 2, 2004 4:25 PM
To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts" <cctalk(a)classiccmp.org>
Subject: cable lacing...
There was some discussion not too long ago about cable lacing and I
recently found a site some of you might be interested in:
http://www.dairiki.org/hammond/cable-lacing-howto/
g.
Hello list,
Just a quickie; are core from a 11/70 interchangeable with a 11/04 (only 16-bit addressing)?
Specifically:
- G236/H224C/G116 32kW x 18 (option MJ11, I think..)
- G235/H217C/G114 16kW x ??
Thanks.
/wai-sun
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Looking for docs on the above.
Lee.
________________________________________________________________________
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Hi,
I was searching the web for data on these regulators UA78MGIC, and noted your appeal. Are you still needing ?
Whilst I dont believe I have any of the 79 variety I have a few of the 78's
I would like a data on these, then they can be put to good use in say 0.5A regulated power supplies.
Regards
Norman Pomfret
Hello list,
I'm trying to figure out the boot sequence on both the RK05 and RL02 drive from a PDP. Here's how I understand it so far:
1. Get the bootstrap in core either via the FP or PTR.
2. Execute bootstrap and pull in the absolute loader from 1st. sector of
512 bytes or 256 words;
i.e. copy 1st. sector of drive to core starting from 0
3. Execute absolute loader by a JMP 0.
4. ??? What happens next ???
Because of not (yet) having a RL02 nor a RK05, I'm using simh and trying to trace what's going on when I "attach rk0 rt11.dsk" and then a "boot rk0", but it's pretty difficult going..
Thanks.
/wai-sun
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Sign-up for Ads Free at Mail.comhttp://promo.mail.com/adsfreejump.htm
See below...
Reply-to: JWLane43(a)aol.com
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Fri, 25 Jun 2004 12:11:02 EDT
From: JWLane43(a)aol.com
To: vcf(a)vintage.org
Subject: (no subject)
Hello!
I would be very grateful if you could help me. Do you know of any company or
individual that repairs old calculators. I have two Texas TI-58 Programmable
calculators that do not work and I am very keen to make contact with anyone
that has a working knowledge of the internal workings of these machines.
Thanks very much for any help you can give me.
Jonathan
--
Sellam Ismail Vintage Computer Festival
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
International Man of Intrigue and Danger http://www.vintage.org
[ Old computing resources for business || Buy/Sell/Trade Vintage Computers ]
[ and academia at www.VintageTech.com || at http://marketplace.vintage.org ]
So I got the VAX 4000/300, R400X, and TU-81+ that was offered a week ago
on the list... it's in excellent shape, I think there was only one
scratch among all three pieces.
Now, I got the machines, but no cables with them. I need the cables
that go from a KLESI card to the TU-81 (DD50M->DD50F), and the DSSI
cables to go from the CPU cabinet to the R400X (female HD50 to female
HD50.. aka SCSI-2 connector). I'm considering the possibility of
making my own cable for the TU-81 (no one seems to sell cheap M->F DD50
cables), but it looks like it'll either be hard or quite expensive to
get the DSSI cables new.
So does anyone have some DSSI & LESI cables (with the proper connectors
for my use) available for trade or sale at a reasonable price?
Pat
--
Purdue University ITAP/RCS --- http://www.itap.purdue.edu/rcs/
The Computer Refuge --- http://computer-refuge.org
Wellicht een beetje laat, maar ik heb hier nog van die meetpods liggen.
Ook een manual is aanwezig.
MVG,
Cor
_________________________________________________________________
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On another list I'm on (one of the NetBSD lists), I got the message
quoted below, indicating that a bunch of stuff is looking for help
escaping the crusher in San Francisco. After exchanging email with its
author, I got approval to forward it over here. Please respond
directly to Jason (address in the Cc: here, or the quoted headers
below); I cannot do anything useful with responses except forward them
thataway myself.
Note there's a deadline less than two weeks off. (The "if you write a
driver" stuff probably actually means "...a NetBSD driver"; given the
original context - NetBSD lists - this could reasonably be assumed
there, but classiccmp is a bit more wide-ranging in such regards.)
/~\ The ASCII der Mouse
\ / Ribbon Campaign
X Against HTML mouse(a)rodents.montreal.qc.ca
/ \ Email! 7D C8 61 52 5D E7 2D 39 4E F1 31 3E E8 B3 27 4B
> Mime-Version: 1.0 (Apple Message framework v618)
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> Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
> Cc: port-m68k(a)NetBSD.org
> From: Jason Thorpe <thorpej(a)wasabisystems.com>
> Subject: Free MVME-147SA for pick-up in San Francisco
> Date: Mon, 5 Jul 2004 20:40:06 -0700
> To: port-mvme68k(a)NetBSD.org
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>
>
> --Apple-Mail-64--891142980
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> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed
>
> Folks...
>
> I have an MVME-147SA system available for free for pick-up in San
> Francisco. This system was working and running NetBSD/mvme68k in a
> diskless configuration the last time I turned it on (about 6 years
> ago). The system board is installed in a Motorola VME card cage with a
> transition module on the back (providing serial and Ethernet) and 2
> removable SCSI disk carriers.
>
> There are some extra goodies included with this system, so pay close
> attention:
>
> - Ciprico RF3400 disk controller. I believe this is an ESDI
> controller. I do NOT have programming info for this controller. I do,
> however, have a programming manual for a Ciprico RF3510 SCSI
> controller, which I will include (possibly useless, but what the heck).
>
> - Ciprico TM3000 9-track tape controller. I have the programming
> manual for this. It works with any Pertec-compatible 9-track tape
> drive.
>
> ...here's the gem:
>
> - Pertec "portable" 9-track tape drive. I don't know the specific
> model number -- it's hidden somewhere under the plastic housing, no
> doubt. I *believe* this drive is capable of reading the 3 common
> 9-track tape densities (though to be honest, I can't even remember what
> those are anymore). Here are some photos:
>
> http://www.shagadelic.org/photos/pertec1.jpg
> http://www.shagadelic.org/photos/pertec2.jpg
>
> ...and here's the reason I have the Pertec in the first place:
>
> - UNIX 32V Time-Sharing System, Version 1.0 on 800bpi 9-track tape. I
> don't know if this tape is still readable, but I have kept it hidden
> away in a box, protected from heat, cold, and light for about 10 years
> now. Here are some photos of the tape:
>
> http://www.shagadelic.org/photos/32v-tape1.jpg
> http://www.shagadelic.org/photos/32v-tape2.jpg
>
> Now, for the terms and conditions:
>
> - I will NOT ship this stuff. The tape drive is especially heavy (if I
> had to guess, I'd say it's 200lbs).
>
> - If you take all the pieces, AND you write a complete driver for the
> TM3000, I will buy you a suitable quantity (e.g. 12-pack of a micro,
> half-dozen if you want some Belgian corked bottles) of quality beer.
> If you also manage to read the contents of the 32V tape, I will also
> buy you a nice bottle (or two) of wine.
>
> - There is a dead line. This stuff is going to the crusher to have the
> metals reclaimed on July 17.
>
> - If you don't have a car large enough to haul this stuff away, I might
> be able to deliver it to a destination in the San Francisco Bay Area,
> if I can arrange help loading the tape drive into my VW Bus (yes, it
> really is that heavy).
>
> I would really prefer NOT to have to crush the MVME-147 - it still
> works, and is a fine little NetBSD system. But I need it out of my
> garage so I can make progress on a home improvement project. So,
> someone please come and rescue it.
>
> I'll probably not throw away the 32V tape whatever happens to the
> stuff. But without the tape drive, the tape is pretty useless, and
> there aren't too many 9-track tape drives around anymore. So here's
> your chance to grab a little bit of computing history... don't miss
> out!
>
> -- Jason R. Thorpe <thorpej(a)wasabisystems.com>
>
> --Apple-Mail-64--891142980
> content-type: application/pgp-signature; x-mac-type=70674453;
> name=PGP.sig
> content-description: This is a digitally signed message part
> content-disposition: inline; filename=PGP.sig
> content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
>
> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
> Version: GnuPG v1.2.3 (Darwin)
>
> iD8DBQFA6h8WOpVKkaBm8XkRAsCvAKDHr44N/0rsbtttJTb3JvjY1N0B8gCfT2uj
> RjFXRTZDO+syLKnT8SVEsrA=
> =2g6s
> -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
>
> --Apple-Mail-64--891142980--
Hi, got a nice DEC 7000 with 4 CPUs 1GB of memory. AFAIK it is
the first Alpha model made. Same chassis as the VAX 7000.
This one works beautifully and sounds really nice. I had
OSF installed on it once (have the OSF CD with it, just
no license key.) I can't keep it though, because now I have
my VAX 6660 together and my last spot is gone.
I would like to trade this one for a VAX 40000 in a pedestal.
Don't you think that is a fair trade?
Pictures:
http://www.gusw.net/~schadow/dec7000.jpghttp://www.gusw.net/~schadow/dec7000open.jpg
This box is in Indianapolis, IN. If you come here you get to see
my collection of VAX6460 with vector processors and an 11/780.
You may even get a VAX6400 for free and another smaller alpha
(DEC3000 system) as a thank you gift.
This one is heavy. However, there are at least two ways to load
it: either liftgate truck, or a u-haul low-floor truck or
trailer. The low-floor trucks are really nice: cheap to rent
and easy to load (we just lay the machine on its side.)
regards,
-Gunther
Hello,
I have read some of your pstings at classiccmp.org.
I got a HP 7958B drive of the trash (still working) and would like to get
it running on an IEEE488 Interface.
You wrote you got it so far to read/write sector this would help me alot.
Also an interesting command would be to park the head before switching off.
Maybe you know where to get some resources or you have something yourself.
Thanks in advance,
Michael
On Jul 5, 19:46, Pete Turnbull wrote:
> On Jul 5, 12:25, Jules Richardson wrote:
> > "Unable to load dksc(0,1,1)unix.IP12: file not found"
> >
> > any ideas? I think I set the disk within fx as a usrrootdrive -
> > which I believe is correct for IRIX 5.3?
It was once common practice to keep /usr on a separate partition,
particularly if you had small (200MB) drives, in which case most of the
root drive would be root and swap, with /usr mounted later. If you
want to prevent a user filling his space so that there's no room left
in /tmp or /var/tmp either, it might still be a good idea but otherwise
multiple partitions usually just mean that at some future date there's
enough space on the physical drive for <what_you_want>, except it's
split betwwen several partitions and therefore unusable[1] :-)
> Last Indigo install I did, I used 812-0336-004, but I might have
> booted it off something older. Don't try it with an XFS-capable one,
> though.
I think I've just found the one I booted it off. It's an EFS CD I
burned a long time ago; if you're still stuck I can upload the 28MB
volume header tomorrow[2] and you can burn that onto a CD-R. You can
boot a CD that only has a vh. I discovered that the first time I
burned an EFS CD, which is normally built in two files -- the volume
header (which includes the sgilabel, partition table, and things in mr
or sa), and "the rest". Unfortunately instead of cat'ing the two files
to cdrecord, I told cdrecord to write the two files on its command
line, and ended up with two data tracks instead of one.
[1] As I discovered last time I built a complete inst-able perl
under IRIX 5.3.
[2] 28MB is a bit much for my ISDN line this evening.
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
On Jul 5, 12:25, Jules Richardson wrote:
> I'm sure for the Indy though when I exited fx I could then go to the
> install system option and it worked ok. If I try this with the Indigo
it
> still loads the installation program but then gives:
>
> "Unable to load dksc(0,1,1)unix.IP12: file not found"
>
> any ideas? I think I set the disk within fx as a usrrootdrive - which
I
> believe is correct for IRIX 5.3?
dksc(0,1,1) is normally the swap partition, and that's where the
installation tools put the miniroot during installation. Assuming
you've done the right things with fx, you should have a small(ish) EFS
root partition as partition 0, 1 is swap, IIRC 7 is the usr partition,
8 is the volume header, and 10 is the whole disk. My guess is that
when you booted the CD, you used one of the few that has no Indigo
(IP12) standalone unix on it. The first release of 5.3 did have it,
the next one didn't (by mistake), and AFAIK all the subsequent ones
did.
I guess the number on your CD is 812-0336-001. The first 5.3 CD was
812-0119-006 and that does work, and so do (IIRC, though it's a long
time since I did a clean install on an Indigo) 812-0336-002 et seq.
Last Indigo install I did, I used 812-0336-004, but I might have
booted it off something older. Don't try it with an XFS-capable one,
though.
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
On Jul 5, 11:38, Jules Richardson wrote:
>
> Blah! OK, the Indigo doesn't like my old Apple SCSI CDROM drive, even
> though the Indy and my Sun Ultra 1 do... luckily I had a spare
> quad-speed drive which has a sector-size jumper on the back. (So it
> wasn't a bad SCSI cable or a problem with the Indigo's external SCSI
> connector as it turns out)
Probably the drive responds correctly to the command to set the
blocksize. The Indy and later machines, and most not-too-old Suns can
do that from the boot PROM, but an Indigo can't (nor can my
Sparcstation 1).
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
I recently came into possession of a relatively large pile of on-topic
stuff, and have some of my own that I want to get rid of. I haven't
completed inventorying it all yet - there are a half-dozen boxes I've
yet to look through - but it's slow enough going that I'm sending
around a list of what I have inventoried in case anyone is interested.
When I get the rest gone through I'll post another list.
This stuff is all "cover shipping from Montreal and it's yours". That
includes free if picked up - drop me a line to arrange such.
Feel free to ask questions if you want more information about anything.
Except as noted, everything is untested; some items I can test if
desired - again, drop me a line.
/~\ The ASCII der Mouse
\ / Ribbon Campaign
X Against HTML mouse(a)rodents.montreal.qc.ca
/ \ Email! 7D C8 61 52 5D E7 2D 39 4E F1 31 3E E8 B3 27 4B
The list, mostly in no particular order:
TI Programmable 57 pocket calculator, including wall-wart, carrying
case, and "Making Tracks Into Programming" manual. Battery pack
included but will not charge enough to power the calculator even for
seconds. Red filter over display has come loose but is present.
Worked as of a month or two ago, when powered with wall-wart. Some
keys occasionally act a little flaky. I bought this new on 1981-01-26
and still have the receipt.
Numerous (ca. 20-30) cables, 25-pair POTS-quality wire. One end has
Centronics-50 connector; the other is loose wire ends. Length is some
small numbers of metres - about right for cross-connect within a wiring
closet.
A rackmount panel with 64 eight-conductor RJ45-style jacks on the
front; on the back, each four jacks are wired to a Centronics-50
connector. A C-50 gender-bender is attached to each. Note these are
NOT Cat-V, probably not even Cat-III - they look intended for POTS use,
or perhaps serial lines, to my eye.
A rackmount power switch/filter of some kind. It has a mains cable
(which is cut off near the box), a space where a switch has been
removed, and five outlets (two "filtered" and three "unfiltered") of
the sort you find on some computers to feed switched power to another
box - the same connector you find on the computer end of most computer
mains cords. The metal box has a corner twisted and torn; it either
suffered a peculiar accident or was attacked by someone who wanted to
get into it but couldn't be bothered to remove the screws.
Inkjet cartridge refilling equipment (syringe, hole-maker, small bottle
of black ink).
Old Sun-2-era external disk enclosure, ca. 1'x1'x4". Two DD50F SCSI
connectors and mains power connector. Contains power supply,
Micropolis 1325 drive, adapter board between SCSI and the drive, and
internal cabling to hook it all together.
EMP "Manual Mini Modem MM-102". Not acoustic-coupler, but almost that
old; has answer/off/originate switch, power-on and carrier-detect
lights. Includes wall-wart thought, but not tested, to go with it.
Captive telco cable ending in RJ11 plug; also has RJ11 "TELE JACK"
connector and DB25F connector for host.
Ten Cabletron TPT-2 AUI-to-UTP transceivers. These predate the current
10baseT standard for link test; they do not reliably detect link when
connected to (some) modern equipment, but at least two of them work
fine when connected to one another with a crossed cable. There
presumably exists 10baseT equipment they work with; as far as I know I
have none.
Hayes Smartmodem 2400. In original package, including styrofoam
packing, box, manuals, business-reply cards, wall-wart. Box has some
cosmetic damage - scuffs, small rips - but is basically intact; the
styrofoam has basically no damage and the modem's cosmetic condition
verges on pristine.
Packard Bell PB2400PLUS modem. Includes wall-wart, manuals, 5?" floppy
still in sealed envelope, styrofoam packing, but not surrounding box.
S-100 (I think) board from Cromemco, labeled "8K BYTESAVER" with eight
24-pin DIP sockets. It includes a switch labeled "PROGRAM POWER" and a
7812, so I assume it is a PROM reader/burner.
S-100 (I think) board. It looks like a memory board; it is marked
"S100" and "10032-B" and includes a 4x16 array of 18-pin DIP sockets,
all empty. It has 32 ceramic disc capacitors, presumably for
power-supply decoupling; two are physically damaged to the point where
I would not trust them to remain unshorted without testing.
SPARCstation 2 mainboard. The CPU has been replaced with a Weitek
POWER?P. No RAM. This board does not work; my best guess is that the
fault is in the CPU.
An ISA card from "ARCHIVE CORPORATION". Back-panel interface is a
DB25F, with a 50-pin header just behind this. Marked "ASSY 80530-151"
and "REV A"; the "151" and "REV A" are stamped, the "ASSY" and "80530-"
are silkscreened.
A MITEL SMART-1, whatever that is. It's marked "PAV Chaining" and
"Positive Account Code Verification With Chaining". The interfaces
are: a peculiar 3-pin power connector; a jack which is physically
RJ45-compatible; and a DB25F. I suspect the jack is actually for POTS,
since the device is marked with Canadian telco regulatory foo. The
matching power supply is included.
Two cables from Centronics-50 to DA15, with handwritten tags saying
things like "PBX<->NAV" "PRI #1".
An octopus cable from a DE9F to three DB25Ms. The DB25Ms have only
some pins present: 1 2 3 4 6 7 8 20 on two connectors, the third the
same except lacking pin 6.
Six DE9M-to-DE9F video cables from the Sun-3 days, when they used
monochrome monitors with DE9 connectors.
Three co-ax cables with BNC connectors on the ends; one marked with
masking tape and marker G, one B, and the third (apparently identical
otherwise) unmarked.
Eight NeXT video cables - the 19-pin D-shell kind. Seven are about a
foot and a half long, the other more like nine or ten feet.
A PC case. Contains practically nothing - internal wiring for the
front-panel switches is about it. No power supply or mobo.
Two Sun-3/60 cases, with power supplies but no machines or plastic
cosmetic covers - just the metal boxes with the power supplies.
Various books:
Introduction to the AMIGA 2000
AMIGA BASIC
The AmigaDOS Manual (two copies)
AMIGA Hardware Reference Manual
AMIGA ROM Kernel Reference Manual: Exec
AMIGA ROM Kernel Reference Manual: Libraries and Devices
AMIGA Intuition Referenec Manual
Inside AegisDRAW
Amiga Programmer's HANDBOOK
INSIDE AMIGA Graphics
COMPUTE!'s AMIGA PROGRAMMER'S GUIDE
A?TALK III
Inside the Amiga
Programmer's Guide to the Amiga
Advanced Amiga BASIC
Amiga 3D Graphic Programming in BASIC
Secrets of the COMMODORE 64
Commodore 64/128 Assembly Language Programming
35 AMAZING GAMES For Your Commodore 64
LEARN TO PROGRAM THE COMMODORE 64 ALL BY YOURSELF! (course notes)
COMMODORE 64 PROGRAMMER'S REFERENCE GUIDE
MAPPING THE Commodore 64
C64 user's manual
MASTERING SIGHT AND SOUND ON THE COMMODORE 64
COMMODORE 64 USER'S GUIDE
COMMODORE 64 GRAPHICS
Your Commodore 64
TROUBLESHOOTING & REPAIRING YOUR COMMODORE 64
A whole boxful of 3?" floppies, I think for an Amiga. (This is a
largeish box, maybe 1'x1?'x6", not just a floppy-storage box.)
Sun books and media:
Solaris 2.2 System Configuration and Installation Guide
Solaris 2.0 System Configuration and Installation Guide
Solaris 2.4 Introduction
Solaris 2.4 System AnswerBook CD (package still sealed)
WABI 2.0 for Solaris 2 CD (package still sealed)
Solaris Quick Start Guide (801-6612-10; Rev A, August 1994)
Solaris 2.4: Latest News (still sealed in shrinkwrap)
Software and AnswerBook Packages Administration Guide (Solaris 2.4)
SPARC: Installing Solaris Software (Solaris 2.4)
SPARCompiler C User's Guide (Version 3.0.1 for Solaris)
A few light-cardboard four-colour-glossies.
A three-ring binder marked "SunOS 4.1 Release & Install"; it appears to
contain exactly that. The plastic piece that tries to keep the pages
from ripping is split across, but both pieces are present.
A package marked "NetWorker for Solaris 4.0.2" and
"Online: DiskSuite 3.0". It contains a CD jewel case marked
"NetWorker for Solaris", still shrinkwrapped; stapled pages marked
"Networker for Solaris Single Server 4.0.2 Release Notes"; stapled
pages marked "Online: DiskSuite 3.0 Release Notes"; and an envelope
marked "NetWorker for Solaris Enabler Certificate Enclosed", seal
still intact.
"Binary Code License" - EULA for something from Sun. Doesn't say what
it applies to specifically, just "the accompanying software". It may
or may not have originally accompanied one or more of the CDs above.
Sun SPARCstation 1 doc box, containing
SPARCstation 1 Installation Guide
SPARCstation 1 Sun System User's Guide
Computers of the C=64/TI99 era (post-8008 pre-IBMPC), and related
stuff. When something is "supposedly" for use with a given machine,
this means that it was so marked by the person I got this stuff from,
but I haven't tried it myself.
Interact
Integrated keyboard and cassette tape
Apparently designed for TV output; captive output co-ax cable
Captive power cable to wall-wart (North American plug)
Connectors: DB25F and two DE9Ms
Back has sticker saying
INTERACT ELECTRONICS, INC.
MODEL NO. ONE
FCC TYPE APPROVAL NUMBER, TV-579
MANUFACTURER, INTERACT ELECTRONICS, INC.
SERIAL NUMBER, 0 1 4 5 7 5
VALID ONLY WHEN OPERATED PURSUANT TO
F.C.C. RULES, PART 15
Fragments apparently constituting most of another Interact (keyboard,
cassette mechanism, wall-wart, main board with two empty IC sockets,
one probably the CPU).
Amiga 2000. Includes keyboard and mouse but no display. (See also
Amiga stuff above.) Includes some six to eight inches of paper which
appears to be printouts and doc photocopies for Atari stuff.
TI-99/4A ("TEXAS INSTRUMENTS HOME COMPUTER"). In what appears to be
the original packaging, with power supply and TV video modulator.
Commodore 64, in what appears to be the original box, with power
supply, TV video monulator, a couple of other cables, a spare
keyboard(!), and an antistatic bag which supposedly contains chips
pulled from another C64.
Laser 128, in the original box (which claims it's Apple IIe/IIc
compatible but has "everything" already built in).
A Commodore "Single Drive Floppy Disk", model 1541 - an external 5?"
floppy drive, supposedly for the C64.
Nine joysticks, supposedly for the C64.
A "64modem", presumably a modem for the C64. (Connectors and markings
are consistent with that theory.)
A "B.I. printer interface", supposedly for the C64.
A VOLKS 6480 modem (1200/300 BPS, autodial/autoanswer, for the C64 and
C128, if the box is to be believed).
An obviously homebrew (and rather carelessly built) reset button
attachment, supposedly for the C64.
A "Forth 64" cartridge, from "handic software ab", presumably (and
supposedly) for the C64.
A C64 three-in-one card. This has three card-edge connectors and a
three-position switch, and a single card edge to plug into a C64.
Presumably it's so you can leave three things physically connected all
the time and switch which one is logically connected with the switch,
instead of constantly swapping modules. Bears the name "NAVARONE".
A C64 four-in-one card. This has four card-edge connectors and a
single card edge to plug into a C64. There is also an enable switch
next to each socket, a reset button, and a fuse. Bears the name
APROTEK. Comes with a slip of paper which is akin to a user's manual
and a piece of ribbon cable with a card edge on one end and a card-edge
connector on the other. The conductor count and inter-connector
spacing are different from those on the gadget itself.
Two cables, about five feet long, with a peculiar DIN-shell
four-conductor connector on one end and bare wire ends on the other.
Pin placement on the connector is identical on both cables.
Something in a box which is hand-marked "Pow. Sup. C64 Repairable".
The device is marked "INPUT 117VAC 60HZ" "OUTPUT 5VDC-1.8A 9VAC9VA".
Included is a sheet with something that could reasonably be a schematic
for such a power supply, though I haven't opened the device to check
whether it matches the schematic. It has two cords, one to a North
American mains plug, the other to a 7-pin DIN-shell connector.
A "PROTECTO BIG BLUE PRINTER INTERFACE", in a box hand-marked with the
Commodore name.
A good deal of paper, including such things as documentation in French
for NetNorth/BITNET and a number of pages torn from magazines
containing computer-related articles, and documentation for a number of
games. It wouldn't surprise me to find a floppy or two amid them; I
didn't go through them in detail.
HP 2109E cpu (21MX/E), chassis, power supply, front panel
HP 2113E cpu (21MX/E), chassis, power supply, front panel
HP 2108M cpu (21MX/M), chassis, power supply, front panel
The 2109 and 2113 are available immediately. The 2108 I will get rid of
eventually, just not sure if I'll get rid of it now or in about 6 months.
All are untested and dirty. The 2109 and 2113 will clean up nicely. The 2108
is a hard luck case and a major restoration job. The 2109 and 2113 have cpu
keys, but someone glued them in or they are stuck. The key works fine, you
just can't take the key out. The 2108 has no key. I will test and clean them
first if I get a chance. No I/O or memory cards included. Some memory and/or
I/O cards will probably be available from me at a later date.
I will also have some as yet undetermined quantity of HSFCA memory boards
available (not usable as main memory, just ECC)
Also available - HP 21MX 12979A rackmount I/O expansion unit
Items I'm looking for...
HP 12920/12921/12922 three PCA Multiplexor set
HP 2102E high speed memory controller PCA qty 2
HP 13210A disc interface PCA for spare
HP 12597A 8 bit duplex register boards qty 2
HP 12531C or D HS terminal or Buffered TTY PCA (qty 1 or 2)
HP Blank PROMS for 21MX loader roms
HP Blank PROMS for 21MX microcode roms
DSI 2400 paper tape reader/punch OR...
... RS232 interface board for Facit 4070
Data General 6030/6031 8" floppy drive
Data General Paper Tape reader, don't know the model number, for Nova and
Eclipse
Any spare Data General Nova/Eclipse boards (Nova 3, Eclipse S/130 or S/200),
primarily cpu sets, disk, cassette, memory
Data General 6045 disc drive
DEC H212 8K core memory plane for 8E
DEC M7891-D 128KW for 11/45 (qty 2)
Microdata M1600, M2000, or Reality Royale system
Honeywell DPS-6 system
Jay West
PS - Bob, now that I've been using the 21MX front panel for a while, I gotta
tell ya, I prefer using the 2100 front panel. What's this "store" button
crap? *GRIN*
---
[This E-mail scanned for viruses by Declude Virus]
Blah! OK, the Indigo doesn't like my old Apple SCSI CDROM drive, even
though the Indy and my Sun Ultra 1 do... luckily I had a spare
quad-speed drive which has a sector-size jumper on the back. (So it
wasn't a bad SCSI cable or a problem with the Indigo's external SCSI
connector as it turns out)
Anyway, I'm just trying to get IRIX 5.3 from CD onto a disk in the
Indigo (one which currently has a mangled copy of 5.3 on it). I've used
the same CD to install 5.3 on the Indy previously - just not tried it
with the Indigo...
If I go view the PROM monitor and select "Install System Software", then
use the CDROM as the source device, it copies the installation program
to disk, says complete, but then dies with:
"Unable to load dksc(0,1,1)unix.IP12: file not found"
I seem to recall the Indy doing the same thing, which I think was a disk
partition problem (as in that case I was installing onto a drive that
had previously been in a PC)
So, I restarted at this time went into the PROM monitor's command
monitor and did:
"boot -f dksc(0,6,8)sashARCS dksc(0,6,7)stand/fx.ARCS"
... which was what I used for the Indy to partition the drive. On the
Indigo it just blows up with:
72912
NESTED EXCEPTION at pc: bfc11d90, first exception at bfc11d90
Any ideas what I'm doing wrong? Given that the Indigo's an R3K and the
Indy is an R4K, do I need a different boot command to load the relevant
R3K software?
I know this Indigo works - but the release of 5.3 is a copied version
that came with the Indy... maybe it's missing something I need, or maybe
SGI did different 5.3 releases for R3K and R4K machines?
cheers
Jules
I'm aware of the following up for disposal (I think they're off to
landfill at the end of next week by the sounds of it) in Cambridge, if
anyone's interested:
17 HP Xterminals
5 HP 700RX (Xterminals)
3 Vaxstation 3100
4 Large SCSI boxes
4 Medium SCSI boxes
6 BBC Bs
16 BBC type monitors
4 NCD Xterms
1 HP Entria Xterm
8 Dot matrix printers
1 DEC 3000
1 Sparc 4
1 Extremely spiky thing
1 Olivetti drive of some description
1 huge monitor box of cables
Lots of random software
I should be meeting with the chap tomorrow as I'm picking up some other
stuff from him, so hopefully I can look over everything. I *may* grab
the software and cable boxes just so I can take a proper inventory,
although I have no desire to hang onto anything other than a SCSI cable
or two.
Note 1: this is the *UK* Cambridge (I always put that in the subject,
and people always miss it :-)
Note 2: various people know about this stuff, so it's a case of first
come, first served. I can put you in touch with the chap if there is
anything you want from the list.
ps. I too am curious to know what the spiky thing is!
cheers
Jules
On Jul 4, 12:35, Jules Richardson wrote:
>
> I need to create a CD with files on for access by an SGI system. Of
> course, the SGI uses a CDROM drive that uses 512 byte blocks. My
desktop
> PC's the only thing with a CD burner in it, which is naturally set to
a
> block size of 2048.
>
> >From the point of view of creating a CD, does this matter? Or is the
> block size issue only to do with transferring data from the CD unit
to
> the host, and iso9660 is the same on both platforms?
No, it doesn't matter. The block size is just a matter of how the data
is transferred between host and drive, and cdrecord or whatever will
write 2048-byte physical blocks no matter what. The drive that
eventually reads the CD back will de-block them as required. It's a
bit like CP/M, if you've come across CP/M's idea of 128-byte logical
sectors mapped onto whatever physical sector size (commonly 256 or 512
bytes for 5.25" floppies) the sytem uses.
But you should be making EFS CDs for IRIX ;-)
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
I just acquired a number of Arcnet Boot ROMs. I have no idea if these are of any value and/or interest to anyone here, but thought I'd post this information. Please let me know if you have any interest in any or all of these. Specifics are:
"Arcnet, 120A, Netware, Boot ROM, S/N: EG 0021xx - 0029xx, V3.00", I have 9 of these chips.
"Arcnet, 190ST/SBT, Netware, Boot ROM, S/N: EL 0033xx, V3.00", I have 4 of these chips.
"Netware, Arcnet, 120A, Boot PROM, V2.1x", I have only one of these chips.
If you like additional information, like the numbers on the bottom, just let me know.
Thanks for your information and interest.
Bill Machacek