On 2018-03-28 11:23 PM, Ethan Dicks via cctalk wrote:
On Sun, Mar 25, 2018 at 6:09 PM, Ethan Dicks
<ethan.dicks at gmail.com> wrote:
Now I'm really looking forward to unboxing
these next month!
My dialboxes showed up today. The Seiko unit was advertised as
having
a PS/2 adapter. They were mistaken. It's a DE9-MiniDIN8 adapter,
presumably for newer SGI or Sun machines. I'll have to check the
pinout. It also came with an external PSU so I don't need to make a
power-and-serial cable. The Danaher Controls DLS80-1022 did not come
with the DE9-DIN5 power-and-serial cable so I'll have to make one of
those.
-ethan
IBM Dials used a connector like that it has the serial in and out and
+5V power on the connector.? You can find the pinout in the old
"Adapters Devices and Cabling Information for Microchannel Systems"?? I
have seen this manual on the web, back in the microchannel days there
was an adapter with 2 mini-din connectors on it for devices like this
the adapter had 2 async adapter chips and fuses for the +5V power.? I
seem to remember that the adapter was called "Graphics Device Adapter"??
Most of these IBM devices like dials, LPHK (Lighted PF Keys) and tablet
date back to the IBM 5080 graphics workstations that where initially
driven by mainframes but where later adapted to run off first RT system
and then later RS/6000, but where also used on RS/6000 with with
internal graphics adapters to support CAD programs like Catia.
Paul.