Well we might very well be interested in a ZS-1.
On Tue, 8 Jan 2002, Jon Auringer wrote:
Hello all,
Along with the Astronautics ZS-1 machines I posted about earlier, we
have some other equipment available. I have someone interested in one of
the 11/780 machines and possible others. As with the ZS-1 machines, the
time frame isn't very long. Again, we are closing this facility and the
equipment will be scrapped if not rescued.
1 DEC 11/780 (3 wide cabinet) currently up and running 4.2 BSD
3rd cabinet has a Ven-tel plugin modem rack w/~10 modems
1 rack containing 4 Fujitsu Eagle drives (one drive is off-line due
to increasing errors)
1 Fujitsu 9-track tape drive in 2 wide cabinet (not quite as tall as the
VAX cabinet)(This is a nice auto loading drive, there is a second
one available with two drives from a non-VAXyb system)
1 DEC TE16 9-track tape drive (1 wide cabinet)
1 Fujitsu line printer
1 DECWRITER III printing terminal as console
1 DEC 11/780 (3 wide cabinet) currently down but was running fine
when turned off (VMS)
3 DEC RP07 drives (each the size of a washing machine on steroids!)
1 DEC TU78 9-track tape drive
1 Scicards design station (This is a dedicated color graphics
terminal used for printed circuit board (PCB) layout)
I am told the tube was a little on the fuzzy side.
1 Benson photo plotter (we used this exclusively to print out PCB
artwork for checking)
1 Dataproducts line printer
1 DECWRITER III printing terminal as console
3 Valid Systems m68k based Multibus systems. Each system has several
dedicated mono graphics cards to drive multiple design stations.
Each system is in a half-height rack which contains the Multibus
rack, an 8" Fujitsu fixed disk drive and the slot loading 9-track
tape drive. I am unsure of the status of these systems. I believe
they were running when shut down, but I have doubts about the drives.
6 or more of the Valid Scaldstation design stations. Each includes a
table with built-in digitizer and a 19" green monochrome graphics
monitor. These systems were used primarily for schematic capture,
but ran a full blown UNIX, so I always enjoyed reading news on the
"big screen". :)
1 Masscomp m68k based system
This system is also Multibus based and resides in a pair of 5' high
racks. One rack contains the multibus chassis and a pair of Fujitsu
drives. The second rack houses the 9-track tape drive and a third
8" Fujitsu drive. This machine was only lightly used when I signed
on in 1989, and shut down shortly thereafter. I have gotten it up
and running RTU on its ST-506 boot drive, but haven't managed to
get the Fujitsus online.
7 Masscomp MC-500 deskside chassis
These are also Multibus based m68k systems. These run the same OS as
systems above. They have an internal 5-1/4" floppy and ST-506 fixed
drive. There are a bunch of the monochrome graphics tubes that go
along with these units. Actually, it appears like each chassis is
designed to drive a pair of the graphics terminals. I have one of
these boxes that I did a clean install of the RTU OS. The other 6
are in varying states of repair. I think there are enough bits to
assemble at least 3 more complete systems.
2 DEC MicroVax II in a 19"
There is also a rack mounted chassis with a pair of SMD drives.
Each of the MVII has a SMD controller card. Both of the boot drives
are dead and I don't have a way to format replacements. I would
like to hang on to these if I can manage to get them home without
doing myself harm.
1 Tek 4014-1 graphics terminal w/hard copy unit. The terminal works
fine, but I haven't had a chance to test the hard copy unit. I would
like to hang on to this unit, but moving it is definately a two person
and a truck kind of thing. So I may have to let it go. :(
? StorageTek 9-Track drives. 110V operation. How many of these I have
depends on the fate of the ZS-1 machines. I have a couple now, and
will have several more if the ZS machines are scrapped.
Large quantities of documentation. Over a dozen UNIX programmers
manuals in metal desktop racks. Complete documentation sets for VMS,
gray and orange binders. I have a box with complete unopened
docs for a later version (don't remember off-hand which version) of
VMS than we had ever installed. Documentation for several revisions
of SunOS4. If I were to walk through the building, I could easily
double this list. Basically we have just about everything!
Thanks for listening,
Jon
Jon Auringer
auringer(a)tds.net
M. K. Peirce
Rhode Island Computer Museum, Inc.
Shady Lea, Rhode Island
"Casta est quam nemo rogavit."
- Ovid