Hi Jay,
Thank you so much for the advice. What is reforming a capacitor? Does that mention the
electrolytic capacitors may have to be repolarized? If so, how to you do that? How do
you know if a power cap needs to be reformed or not? To get to the transformer, I'll
have to take out just about everything including the card guides. Labeling the wires will
be paramount too. I don't want to get those rascals mixed up! If remember my linear
power supplies correctly, I don't need to put a load on them when I test them, but I
will need to test the caps disconnected, correct? I doesn't sound too difficult, just
tedious and much detail to consider. I definitely want to baby this thing. :) Thanks
again for the restoration advice. I'll need it and more before I'm finished.
Take care my friend.
Kip Koon
computerdoc at
-----Original Message-----
From: cctalk [mailto:cctalk-bounces at
classiccmp.org] On Behalf Of Jay Jaeger
Sent: Thursday, July 16, 2015 9:39 AM
To: cctalk at
classiccmp.org
Subject: Re: Microsoft multiuser Basic for the Altair 8800
First of all, safety first when working around these power supplies.
You have mains voltage exposed all over the place, including the front panel switch.
What I typically do is take it all the boards out and disconnect the power supply, and
pull it out. I then re-form the capacitors by
taking them off completely or, more often, unsoldering one lead. In one case recently
the power supply was regulated (an Altos
computer), and the power transistors were inserted through the power supply case and into
the board from the backside, making
removal both a pain and a little risky, so I just clipped one lead of each larger in
place to do the re-forming (it turned out that in that
particular case, they really didn't need it). I'd be pretty surprised if you
actually had to replace your capacitors. For reforming I have
had pretty good luck with a 4.7K ohm resistor in serial with the capacitor, and in more
than half the cases, the capacitors really didn't
need it.
The transformer is either good or not - and it is probably just fine.
Just measure its output voltages. Do make sure that the transformer is wired for your
voltage depending upon where you live. One
could disconnect it first, but the odds of it putting out too high a voltage are very
very slim, so long as it is wired for the mains voltage
wherever you happen to live. Bad ones either put out nothing for one of the voltages
(open winding) or get hot (shorted winding).
Neither is dangerous to the rest of the power supply.
Then, check all the voltages to make sure they are not way too high, and throw and
oscilloscope on it to make sure that there isn't a
whole lot
of ripple (typically caused by a bad rectifier). Remember that on the
original Altair and most S100 machines each board had its own regulator, so this
isn't an exact thing. (On my machine, I actually had
to add a second 8V supply in order to provide power for a backplane completely full of
boards.)
For bootstraps, perhaps look for a ROM board on eBay (a Bytesaver or the like), and burn
yourself a ROM.
For a serial card, you can find T-UART or IMSAI MIO and the like show up
on eBay pretty frequently. Be patient so you don't overpay. ;) Real
MITS Altair cards come up far less frequently. Make sure you research (say, on
bitsavers.org/pdf) which ones support current loop if
you really want to hook up a real teletype.
Not sure where you'd find your multi-user basic, but there is quite a lot of
Altair/S100 software available as part of the SimH
environment, and a separate web site at
http://schorn.ch/altair_6.php
JRJ
On 7/15/2015 1:56 PM, Kip Koon wrote:
Hi Drlegendre,
How did you go about checking things out before you applied power for the first time
(again)? :) I think I need to check out the
electrolytic capacitors and the
transformer at least.
In my system, the front panel is wired to the
backplane along with the power supply wires so when I do power up, how do I protect
everything?
There are screws the power wires come from, but
they are difficult to get to. Do I need to consider replacing any other caps?
Do you have a write up about your experience? Any help you can give in the hardware
department is most appreciated. Thanks in
advance. Take care my friend.
Kip Koon
computerdoc at
sc.rr.com
http://www.cocopedia.com/wiki/index.php/Kip_Koon
> -----Original Message-----
> From: cctalk [mailto:cctalk-bounces at
classiccmp.org] On Behalf Of drlegendre .
> Sent: Wednesday, July 15, 2015 1:15 AM
> To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts
> Subject: Re: Microsoft multiuser Basic for the Altair 8800
>
> Hey Kip
>
> I can't help you with the software, but I just finished an Altair
> restoration (my first) a few months ago, and am still interested in
> getting the machine connected and actually doing something
> interesting. The Altair was almost totally below the radar by the time I really
started getting up to speed on micros, which would
have been around 1983-1984 or
so. This one was sort-of given to me by a former colleague of mine, around eight years
ago. It was a
total basket case, a real pile.. but it seems to be sorted at this point.
>
> It would be great if you'd let me follow along, keep in touch and let
> me know how you're working to get the Altair linked up to the term,
> getting the system bootstrapped, loading software, etc.. that's been a problem
here, figuring out the serial I card (or finding one to
replace it, that does have
docs).
>>
>> Best,
>> Bill
>>
>> On Tue, Jul 14, 2015 at 11:56 PM, Kip Koon <computerdoc at sc.rr.com>
wrote:
>>
>>> Hi Guys,
>>>
>>> I have finally decided to restore my original Altair 8800 which has
>>> been in storage for over 30 years. Does anyone have a copy of
>>> Microsoft's Multiuser Disk Extended Basic for the Altair 8800? When
>>> I was in college in '79 to '81, in the computer room was an ASR-33
>>> Teletype and 3 Learseigler terminals connected to an Altair 8800B.
>>> An IMSAI was also there connected to one
>>> ASR-33 Teletype. I'd like to resurrect this multiuser Basic
>>> software environment on my Altair someday once the restoration is complete.
>>> Any help in securing a copy of all the necessary software would be
>>> most appreciated.
>>> Thanks a bunch in advance. Take care my friends.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Kip Koon
>>>
>>> <mailto:computerdoc at sc.rr.com> computerdoc at
sc.rr.com
>>>
>>> <http://www.cocopedia.com/wiki/index.php/Kip_Koon>
>>>
http://www.cocopedia.com/wiki/index.php/Kip_Koon
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>
>