We had the same problem. It?s a DE-19 connector, fits in the same envelope has a DB-9, but
3 rows instead of 2. You can see in this video right around here:
. ITT-canon used to make these. You can look them up
on eBay, which is where we found ours. Make sure you don?t get a two row DB-19, which is a
completely different animal.
Marc
On Aug 18, 2020, at 8:15 PM, Steve Malikoff via cctalk
<cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
?Would anyone be able to identify the 19 pin connector used on the Alto II keyset?
Shown in the second photo on
https://www.computerhistory.org/collections/catalog/X124.82C
The Xerox engineering doc (209962B_Alto_II_Assembly_Keyset.pdf) has it as P/N DE51218-1
if I interpret it correctly.
I've looked for a while and the closest I can find appears to be Mouser p/n 2DEF19P
The cost of 136 USD (each!) is more than I (and perhaps everyone else) would really like
to pay, and that's only for
the male end.
Ideally I would like a datasheet on this original connector if possible, to know the
pin-pin spacing and the pressed metal
surround dimensions.
I've just ordered small trial quantities of screws, microswitches, e-clips, nutserts,
rods and so on for my keyset
lookalikes/workalikes. Also about to start the key mapping to F5-F9 using a popular small
SOC board, which is small enough
to be inside a custom printed shell that the keyset plugs into.
That is, the 3-row 19-pin female connector side which goes through to USB.
I was thinking there's no reason it shouldn't be able to work using the original
connector with a real keyset-less Alto,
should any such animal be lurking out there. Hence looking at the feasibility of placing
in a 19 pin male-female
connector arrangement rather than the fallback of straight-through to USB.
The whole thing is still at prototype stage so even if it doesn't work out, well I
will at least have a bunch of additions
to my nuts/bolts/fasteners/switches stash.
Thanks for any help,
Steve.