Hi Carlos,
It's the A1097 I think.....it definitely begins with 'A' though and I'm
fairly sure its not the 2094. And it wasn't that heavy :)
thanks!
-----Original Message-----
From: Carlos Murillo-Sanchez [mailto:cem14@cornell.edu]
Sent: 14 July 2000 16:20
To: classiccmp(a)classiccmp.org
Subject: Re: ...and here's another - HP9000 question
Hi Adrian;
Somewhere in time between the higher-end series 300 and the
lower-end series 400, HP switched from 60Hz to 72Hz framebuffers
and fixed frequency monitors to go along with them. The 98752A
(one of the heaviest suckers I have ever lifted!)
and the 98789A are examples of 60Hz tubes. The A1097 and A2094
are two of the most common 72Hz monitors. If you tell me the
monitor model (framebuffer model would help too) I might be
able to find out more for you.
carlos.
Adrian Graham wrote:
Hi folks,
I forgot to mention, in the crash I had last week that
damaged the Apple ///
etc I also had an HP Apollo 9000/600 workstation
with 19"
monitor. Whilst
I'm assuming the front passenger airbag
caught the monitor
since it was
unrestrained on the front seat (but the seat was
pushed
right up to the
dash) it is now however refusing to display blue.
If I
remove the B plug on
the RGB cable the display doesn't
alter......since if I
remove the green the
sync goes and they're from a similar era
could I substitute
a spare DEC
VRT21 I've got lying around here in the
office? That
monitor is a 60hz
1280x1024 RGB sync-on-green Trinitron.
Of course, I'd like to repair the HP's monitor, but my knowledge of
repairing monitors begins at the glass fuse and ends on the
high voltage bit
cheers
--
Carlos Murillo-Sanchez email: cem14(a)cornell.edu
428 Phillips Hall, Electrical Engineering Department
Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853