Steve,
There are several dealers of used HP1000 and 3000
equipment (Monterey bay Communications) that may be
able to help you with a replacement key and other
items for a few $ if you're inclined to go that route.
Google on used HP computers. Nice find. Used 264x
terminals when I was at HP and they are built like
tanks.
Lee Courtney
--- Loboyko Steve <sloboyko(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
I picked up on a $10.00 eBay Buy it now an HP2644A
terminal. This terminal uses little tapes (DC-100A's
or HP 98200A's). It's slightly beat up (mostly in
shipping in spite of the seller's best and
professional efforts), but nothing (except see
below)
that I can't repair - I'm pretty sure I can get this
back to nearly original factory condition. It should
be a nice complement to some classic micro's I'm
working with. The HP 2644A is working. It even came
with the hard to replace RS-232 cable,with an edge
connector to the unit, weird. Annoying, considering
that this thing cost several $1000's in the mid
1970's. It looks like you could put 20 amps of
RS-232
signal through it, given the diameter of the cable!
The 2644A's claim to fame is that it used the 8008
CPU, and has a tiny mini-operating system, pretty
good
for a machine with 16K of address space. There is a
web site in Germany with a pong game that is
actually
that you run on the 8008 in the terminal via a
diagnostic "back door", which I'm looking forward to
trying. I wonder who wrote it.
This unit I have doesn't have many goodies like
graphics or lower case, but for $10, what do you
want.
It's built like a "mainframe", and later models used
the same everything with different boards plugged
into
the backplane.
I got a few manuals with it; the 2645A and 2648A
manuals. The 2645 seems to be very similar.
A few questions:
1. The "infamous" HP 98200A tapes are REALLY awful.
I
got a box on eBay, never used, in wrappers, and they
failed immediately. After taking them apart, I think
I
know why. Even sealed after all these years, the
oxide
was actualy coming off the tape and the reels didn't
even have clips to hold the tape on. Whatever held
the
ends of the tape on originally, doesn't. Hard to
beleive that this was an HP product of that era.
I've
got almost 35 year old audio casettes that still
work
and sound great.
I think DC100A's and even DC2000's will work
according to what I've googled. Any comments? Of
course, I've already tackled and (probably) fixed
the
"gummy" roller problem. Before I used the drives,
even. Naturally, I've given away all of my DC2000
tapes...
2. Has anyone ever seen a CRT develop mold between
the
(bonded to the tube) safety glass and the tube
itself?
The unit itself was probably stored indoors in a
controlled environment because it was otherwise very
clean. I'm pretty sure I can get a replacement, but
it
will cost. Too bad, because the tube is really good
and not burned in whatsoever, which is very
surprising
(the tape heads have zero detectable wear also).
Trust
me, even if it's technically possible, I won't be
trying to separate the safety glass from the tube
itself. I hate replacing CRT's. Unfortunately, I've
gotten good at it.
3. The tab key is missing. Not broken off, just
missing. I have a "kinda close" replacement, but if
anyone has a junk HP product of that era with tall,
"Cherry" keytops, I'll take anything.
Thanks for reading!
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