What is the provenance / source of the panels?

Mine came from an acquisition by Nick Allen from a collection in Georgia. I believe there was a Multics installation in Atlanta they were removed from.

The panels on the 6180 at USL were all inside side access panels for one of the rows of hardware boxes. One box panel was usually exposed with the door removed, but it could be closed up. There were problems which required access to one of the panels frequently in operations, so it was seldom closed.

We probably could get access to Dockmaster with some advance arrangement and good will on the part of the CHM when they have time to arrange access to the storage to which it was moved to see actual installed panels.

I agree, the black panel has about the only interesting display.

+David Griffith

I might also suggest that once David Griffith finishes porting the PDP 10 Panda panel and has that design working and integrated that there may be enough blink'n lights there to display a satisfying 6180 display on a normal desktop case.

the advantage is that it is at least already 36 bits and has some of the nonsense of having that bit count worked out already. I'd think we (someone) could fork and add a second bank of lights, or use two of the Panda usb devices to put out a lot of information about a 72 bit 6180.

His main problem now is with interfacing and coding PDP 10 assembly code which is obviously not useful for re-purposing it for Multics use anyway, and is internal to SIMh PDP10 emulation.

If a lot of people who are interested in blinking Multics Honeywell 6180 displays were interested it would contribute a lot to him selling out a run of his board kits.

thanks
Jim

On 3/12/2016 10:57 AM, couryho...@aol.com wrote:
and for horrible deep level maint. I would imagine they would be useful.... they look like something too complex to let operations level people diddle with... but are these used with exactly WHICH Honeywell system? If we are going to display them need to tell the right story in the museum.
Ed#
In a message dated 3/12/2016 7:44:50 A.M. US Mountain Standard Time, dave.g4...@gmail.com writes:

    The panels would be pretty much un-used Unlike 360 panels these
    were hidden behind doors for most of the time. Assuming the work
    the same on a Multics box as on a regular L66/DPS box the only
    time they were really used was if you split a 2 x CPU system into
    2 x 1 CPU system, or changed the memory configuration from
    interleaved to non-interleaved. Pretty sure you could IPL from the
    console.

    Dave

    *From:*couryho...@aol.com [mailto:couryho...@aol.com]
    *Sent:* 12 March 2016 11:53
    *To:* j...@jwsss.com
    *Cc:* space...@gmail.com; dave.g4...@gmail.com;
    charles.unix....@gmail.com; jwsm...@jwsss.com;
    cctalk@classiccmp.org; ke...@rawfeddogs.net; heal...@aracnet.com;
    couryho...@aol.com; couryhouse.sm...@gmail.com
    *Subject:* Honneywell multics? from panels. the inline phots in
    this message folks -smecc

    ok sent to  all the people cc on the multics stuff..  will not  go
    though on main listserv probably

    here are some of the panels  think there is more  there are at
    least  2 of  each type

    one set will make display her  at smecc museum in az  the other
    set???   maybe someone want to wire into an emulator <<<grin!>>>

aside from a little dust and bad lighting these things look like they were pretty unused thanks ed# www.smecc.org
    <http://www.smecc.org/>


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