On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 11:15 PM Randy Dawson via cctalk <
cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
Paul,
That is so cool!
How much space would it take?
That is my first computer (outside of timesharing and Z-80 homebrew).
My first job was on the PDP-15 to transcribe the APOLLO analog range tapes
of the lunar experiments, primarily the seismometer moonquake data for the
University of Texas Geophysics Lab (they designed the seismometers).
The machine was a pretty good wall, 4-5 racks. On the other side of the
room were the FM/Direct Bell and Howell analog range tape players and
demodulators.
I ran this stuff all night long, hanging tapes, using the scope to adjust
analog heads for the best signal and transcribe to the digital tape.
NASA was not interested in this stuff anymore, they were onto Skylab. The
ALSEP lunar stations were TEG powered and would go on for decades
transmitting, probably still are. All we got was freetime gratis from the
range stations to point at the moon and hang a tape, the data was always
bad and a challenge to tweak heads the best we could.
We had a Versatec electrostatic plotter to output the continuous seismic
record as I was decoding the tapes.
Anytime there was an 'event' on the plotter, I had Dr. Yosio Nakamura's
home number to call him in and take a look.
Many nights, we re tweaked heads, to get the last bits of clean
seismometer data.
Randy
Trivia: As I hung a tape out of sequence once, Fortran coders fixed that
next day. Next time it happened, the TTY chatters, RANDY! DIDN'T YOU
ALREADY ENTER GMT JULIAN DATE XXX:XXX:XXX
It was a all night job alone in the computer room, and I am listening to
Foghat between tape hangs and alignment.
You know, one of the reasons I'm still on here is for the anecdotes
and this is far and away the coolest anecdote I've read in quite some time!
Thanks for sharing, Randy; more, please!