Hi cctalk, I'm looking to replicate the 24-contact connector system that IBM used on SLT and MST cards for many years. Has anyone done this before?
The best photos of this connector that I can find online are on this page: http://techandtrouble.blogspot.com/2014/04/happy-50th-system360-pt5-anatomy-of-slt.html I haven't searched Bitsavers documentation extensively for IBM specifications, but I've seen some details around page 54 of this document: http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/ibm/logic/SY22-2798-2_LogicBlocks_AutomatedLogicDiagrams_SLT,SLD,ASLT,MST_TO_Oct71.pdf I'm interested in reproducing both polarities of this connector: plug and socket. Also, even though the most familiar use of this connector is for board-to-board interconnect, I'm most interested in wire-to-board interconnect. IBM used this method for DC power connectors in its 5100, 5110, and 5120 computers. Here are images of this specific connector: http://stepleton.com/connector/ taken as still images from a YouTube video on the IBM 5120 by Jerry Walker ( https://www.youtube.com/c/JerryWalker-JMPrecision/videos). I've designed and built a device that monitors DC power supply voltages for overvoltage and undervoltage excursions and cuts off all power rails if any voltage goes out of spec. I hope to use it to protect my own IBM 5100 from major power supply faults like the one CuriousMarc encountered with his 9825T: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b-eN93L6yX8 In order to put my device between my 5100's power supply and the logic card backplane, I need to recreate a plug and a socket so that I can fashion a cable that goes out to my device. If anyone has created dependable modern versions of these connectors, would you mind sharing any pointers? Thanks for any help, --Tom