At least somebody reads my postings :-)
Lots of people do, you know :)
I'd better carry on posting, then :-)
I really don't want a separate box either.
Why not small enough to be put on the keyboard? Do it with a SMD IC :)
Many reasons. There isn't that much space inside the HP150 keyboard, I
guess it could fit if I used SMD parts (but there may not be enough
headroom for a socketed PLCC EPROM).
It's a lot harder to prototype with SMD parts in my experience. I can
wire up through-hole devices on stripboard in a couple of hours, testing
as I go. If I used SMD, I'd have to lay out a PCB (takes a lot longer
than running wires!), either etch it or more likely send the design off
somewhere and get the board back a week later, and then I'd have to debug
it, and repeat the PCB production when I'd found I'd made a mistake
(rememebr that in this case I didn't have a documented interface I was
connecting to, I had to make assumptions as to how the HP150/HP120
keyboard microcontroller behaved). And as I mentioned I did make a few
modificuations while tracking down a problem which turned out to be a
dodgy keyswitch on the HP150 keyboard. Doing that with SMD parts would
have been a lot harder
And if you think I can afford to prototype with through-hole and then
make an SMD version, think again! At least not for a one-off like this.
And of course, when doing mods like this I like to use components that
were around at the time the machine was made, in packages that were
currently used. SMD was not common at the time of the HP120/HP150.
cover) to allow the ribbon cable to exit, and 4
3mm holes on top. These
could be filled and painted over, or used to attach a nameplate, or
something if you wanted to reverse the mod.
I like to put 4 screws on the board with 2 nuts each, and glue the
screws with epoxy on the box. It make nice 4 studs for the board and is
completely reversible. And you see nothing from the outside :o)
I prefer to use screws than glue. I've had glue (all types) fail at the
wrong moment. Not to mention the fact that it's a lot easier to remove
screws than undo glue. In fact if a glued assembly fails, I normally try
to repair it with nuts and bolts/
-tony