> On 08/07/2024 3:46 PM EDT brad via cctalk <cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote:
>
>
> Hi there,Haven't had much time for vintage computers due to my job dealing
> with new ones, but the odd evening I have been working on PCB replica
> projects.One of them is for the MAI Jolt. I recently picked up alsome NOS
> 6530-004s, and thought it'd be a fun replica to try. I have completed the
> backside in KiCAD by tracing photos of the board i found online, but
> unfortunately the only decent photo I was able to find of the top side has
> components installed, and I am not good with electrical guesswork.I don't
> know exactly how the JOLT was originally sold (kit? Assembled?) but I'm
> thinking if MAI were like most pioneers then they almost certainly would have
> provided a schematic to end users for modifications and troubleshooting.Does
> anyone know if such a thing exists? I've been searching the usual places
> without success.Or if anyone out there has a bare board (I know, I know
> heh).. and wouldn't mind sending a photo or two..BradSent from my Galaxy
Maybe reach out to Ray Holt, the designer.
https://mississippirobotics.org/about-mississippi-robotics-mechatronics/
Will
Grownups never understand anything by themselves and it is tiresome for
children to be always and forever explaining things to them,
Antoine de Saint-Exupery in The Little Prince