On Sun, 2004-11-14 at 19:45 +0000, Tony Duell wrote:
It is an INCREDIBLY BAD idea to just go into a room
full of
old computers and just randomly start applying power to equipment
in unknown condition. At an absolute minimum, you should check
the condition of the power supplies.
The Nord-10 had at least been powered up in
1993 (I found a system disk
backup with that date), and most likely later. The backup battery that
Which is 11 years ago....
At the very most 11 years ago, which still isn't
bad.
lets the CPU
keep the contents of the memory and registers for a short
while actually contained a charge. I flipped that switch without
worrying the least bit.
I would not be so reckless!. It only takes one failure in the PSU
regulator to take out most, if not all, of the chips in the machine (I
don't want to trust that crowbar protection will work!). I, alas, have
had it happen once, fortunately I could get all the chips and had adump
of the EPROM, but it was not a cheap experience. Running the PSUs on
dummy load and making sure the output voltages are correct is something
that I always do now.
-tony
I think it suffices to say that the guy who cut his teeth on the machine
and has supported them since 1986, and *owned the company since 1992*
didn't have any problems with it... He said that the PSUs were sturdy
and had *plenty* of protection. They were used extensively in the
military and several railway backup systems, those things were
ruggedized to hell and back.
I may have been mistaken, but at the time, as presently, I didn't see
the need to delve deeper into the PSU.
--
Tore S Bekkedal <toresbe(a)ifi.uio.no>