On Wed, Apr 27, 2011 at 11:34 AM, Henk Gooijen <henk.gooijen at hotmail.com> wrote:
From: "Ethan Dicks" <ethan.dicks at
gmail.com>
?I built a simple M-series FLIP-CHIP tester with a
DEC backplane
socket and an 6821 PIA, but it was straightforward to abstract
different arrangements of inputs and outputs for different modules...
Has anyone ever considered building an automated or semi-automated
R/S-Series module tester?
Nope, but Vince and I did a project for "single width" M modules.
Expanding to "dual-width" would be relatively easy.
See
www.pdp-11.nl/homebrew/flipchip/flipchipstartpage.html or via
the updated navigation pane at the left (my projects -> FlipChip tester)
on
www.pdp-11.nl
That's a lot more elaborate than the one I did - mine, I threw a 6821
and a single socket onto a Radio Shack 44-pin 0.156-spacing prototype
module and plugged it into the cartridge slot of a VIC-20. I never
made the software fancy, but it was at least a start.
I suppose the place to start would be to take the 20 most common
modules used in a Straight-8 and -8/S and go through the handbook to
map the gozintas and gozoutas. Obviously the power lines are
standardized, but I'm in the dark if there's a pattern to the signal
lines.
This was sitting around as a draft, so I see Dave McGuire posted a
list of what's in an -8/S. Looks like the R107, R111, R113, R151,
R202, R302 and R401 are the ones to target. The simpler ones like the
R001, R002, and W005 can probably be tested with a rotary switch and a
VOM. I suppose the W050 lamp driver test could also be automated, but
it might take some more complicated hardware if the test were to
include current sourcing on top of simple go-no-go functionality.
Thanks for the list, Dave. I have all the handbooks and prints - now
I know where to start my study.
-ethan