I keep them all. Not counting the bad ones in the SS1 and 2, I have 7.

I can send them to you. I don't mind pick up the shipping costs for something small like that. But the $70 that is it going to cost to ship the SS20 to its new home is another matter.

alan

On 4/27/18 3:33 PM, systems_glitch wrote:
You can always send me the dead modules and I'll rebuild them (GlitchWorks == me, my wife sometimes helps with assembly). Whatever you do, don't throw out the dead NVRAMs -- I'll buy them or pay for you to ship them or whatever, they're not making more and they're the only solution that's 100% compatible.

Yeah, the "still works but pukes errors" is the typical symptom of the newer, slightly incompatible 48T02s in Sun machines. I don't recall if mine kept accurate time with the newer modules.

Thanks,
Jonathan

On Fri, Apr 27, 2018 at 6:28 PM, Alan Perry via cctalk <cctalk@classiccmp.org <mailto:cctalk@classiccmp.org>> wrote:

    The ones from Mouser work well enough in every system that I have
    used them in. I still get the IDPROM corrupt message on boot on
    some systems, but it holds the MAC and the systems boot without
    intervention.

    I tried to repair a few and botched most of them. I know that I
    should be using the GlitchWorks stuff, but it has been easier to
    just buy something that I can plug in.

    alan


    On 4/27/18 3:15 PM, systems_glitch via cctalk wrote:

        Don't get the new MK48T02/MK48T08s from Mouser et al, they're
        not fully
        compatible. They will retain NVRAM but the clock part is
        different and
        you'll get an error on that (system won't autoboot). Rebuild
        your old
        NVRAM! I made up some little boards to make the repair cleaner
        and faster
        to do (I had about 50 NVRAMs to repair):

        http://www.glitchwrks.com/2017/08/01/gw-48t02-1
        <http://www.glitchwrks.com/2017/08/01/gw-48t02-1>

        There are other guides for tacking on a coin cell holder
        without cutting
        off the entire top encapsulation, but if you do that, it may
        not fit under
        SBus cards if you're doing it on a system that puts SBus slots
        over the
        NVRAM.

        Thanks,
        Jonathan

        On Fri, Apr 27, 2018 at 6:03 PM, Glen Slick via cctalk <
        cctalk@classiccmp.org <mailto:cctalk@classiccmp.org>> wrote:

            On Fri, Apr 27, 2018 at 1:55 PM, Alan Perry via cctalk
            <cctalk@classiccmp.org <mailto:cctalk@classiccmp.org>> wrote:

                - SPARCstation 1. Chassis is intact. It has a bad
                IDPROM; aside from that
                  it passes onboard diagnostics. It has 12M memory, no
                HDD now, and a 3.5"
                  floppy drive. It has no SBus cards. Aside from the
                IDPROM, it doesn't
                  have any issues (but I haven't run an OS on it yet).
                Like the SS2, it
                  needs a bath. A small portion of the plastic cover
                over the rear of the
                  case is broken off.

                What are these "actual parts expenses"? IDPROMs are
                around $25 on Mouser.
                SCSI HDDs start around $70 shipped on eBay and SCSI2SD
                are $60 plus
                shipping to me plus the SD price. Given the price of
                25 year old HDDs

            with

                a stated service life of 5 years (according to one
                spec sheet that I

            read),

                SCSI2SD looks pretty attractive.

            When you say IDPROM, is that a Dallas built-in battery
            NVRAM type of
            thing? I have an SS1 with a dead NVRAM thing. Are the
            currently
            available versions of those new at Mouser fully
            compatible? Those are
            one of those things that the new versions aren't always fully
            compatible with the old versions for some systems, even
            though they
            are supposed to be.

            My SS1 is also in the Seattle area. If there is much
            demand for those
            it's probably one of those systems I'll never get around
            to doing
            anything with it myself. I also have a 4/110. Those seem
            to be a lot
            less common, and maybe more collectible.




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