Though I had done the dremeling a while back using
another reference
online (some black and white picture of the RTC surgery),
I used your web site last night to solder the wires in
the right place (I
just received the battery clip a week or so back), and I've
got your "disassembly" page up so I can
remember where all of these screws
go (it's been on the bench for 5 months, it
seems).
So, thank you for the reference.
You're welcome.
And, by extension, thanks to all of you who curate or
create content on
the classic machines.
Over the past month, I've modified 720k teacs to
360k to test reading
floppies, grabbed who knows how
many Kaypro images, and perused more than my share of
old datasheets, all
using resources maintained by
folks like yourself
Numerous Internet resources have helped me enormously too. In fact for me,
this hobby would almost be a very lonely and incredibly frustrating hobby
to engage in if the Internet wasn't around.
Terry (Tez)
On Thu, Jun 6, 2013 at 2:34 AM, Jim Brain <brain at jbrain.com> wrote:
On 6/5/2013 5:52 AM, Terry Stewart wrote:
Well done on getting the 286/SLT up and going
Jim. I've performed that
kind of operation myself. (:
Though I had done the dremeling a while back using another reference
online (some black and white picture of the RTC surgery), I used your web
site last night to solder the wires in the right place (I just received the
battery clip a week or so back), and I've got your "disassembly" page up
so
I can remember where all of these screws go (it's been on the bench for 5
months, it seems).
So, thank you for the reference.
And, by extension, thanks to all of you who curate or create content on
the classic machines. Over the past month, I've modified 720k teacs to
360k to test reading floppies, grabbed who knows how many Kaypro images,
and perused more than my share of old datasheets, all using resources
maintained by folks like yourself.
Jim