Although not a Multibus board I remember this card could be plugged into a
multibus slot (just to draw power). I used to have a manual for this
critter but didn't find it last night going through my manuals. I've got
a retired Intel person chasing this down for me.
George
=========================================================
George L. Rachor george(a)racsys.rt.rain.com
Beaverton, Oregon
At 21:35 10/07/98 -0700, George L. Rachor wrote:
Although not a classic Multibus board this board
manufactured by Intel and
would fit in a Multibus slot. It does use the power pins from a
Multibus card slot.
Beg to differ, George, but the board pictured in the URL given by Alan
definitely is not Multibus! Others will also agree here who either used or
have Multibus hardware in their collections like myself.
I don't even recognize what the thing could possibly be. An Intel OEM
controller of some sort? Relatively small quantity of chips so Alan could
do like Tony D. or myself would do and trace the circuits and draw a
schematic to get a better idea of function.
Regards, Chris
The model number escapes me for a moment but was still being manufactured
in 1994.
Could you give us a bit more info from what you recall on this board George?
=========================================================
George L. Rachor george(a)racsys.rt.rain.com
Beaverton, Oregon
http://racsys.rt.rain.com
On Wed, 7 Oct 1998, oajones wrote:
> Can someone help identify this board? It has a 8085AH CPU in the A9
> socket. On the right the board says "Intel (C) 1977 MADE IN USA." On the
> back of the circuit board is etched "PWB1001480-03 REV H." If you want
> to see what the board looks like click on my link below.
>
>
http://www.bright.net/~oajones/myboard.jpg
>
> --Alan
> --
Christian Fandt, Electronic/Electrical Historian
Jamestown, NY USA
Member of Antique Wireless Association
URL:
http://www.ggw.org/freenet/a/awa/