The seller thinks this may be a drum memory, but it is clearly not. My
guess is that it is some kind of clock generator. Anyone recognize
this?
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Vintage-Mainframe-Computer-Part-Drum-Memory-Control-Data/312942951497
Sounds like a dedicated pulse-height analyzer. DEC sold a lot of machines used
for this purpose, but there were dedicated units that had no CPU, but had
memory, often core.
>From Wikipedia: "A Pulse Height Analyzer (PHA) is an instrument used in
>nuclear and elementary particle physics researc
> From: cctalk [mailto:cctalk-boun...@classiccmp.org] On Behalf Of Chuck
> Guzis
> Sent: Tuesday, January 17, 2017 9:09 AM
> ...
> I find it curious that what seems to be collected in the minicomputer area
> seems to be gear of major brands.
>
> Does anyone collect Varian minis?
> Or General Autom
Rarest:
Computer Control Company (3C, later Honeywell) DDP-116 minicomputer (2
complete, 1 missing front panel)
Discrete germanium transistors, first 16-bit minicomputer, first of the
Honeywell "Series 16" line. Provenance of machines is NRAO Green Bank,
controlling the Green Bank Interfe
I haven't heard of that in quite while. Though I never owned one personally,
agood friend bought one (and waited and waited...) Finally received the
wirewrapversion but it never lived up to it's promise. I google for it and
search eBayfrom time to time hoping to see one, but the number sh
> Does this ring any bells for anyone?
ECD Micromind
--Bill
This looks like a GP-4, though I am suspicious that parts of it have been
modernized. The GP-4 had a drum memory.
https://grafeauction.proxibid.com/aspr/Genal-Precision-Systems-2-door-avionics-cabinets/32464723/LotDetail.asp?lid=32464723
Someone should grab the SEL machines:
https://grafeauct
I will be visiting Albuquerque, Phoenix, Tucson, and various points nearby and
in-between shortly.Any recommendations on electronics surplus and junk shops to
check out? Some of the most famous, like the Black Hole in Los Alamos are long
gone. Any other must-see attractions for the classic com
On the 1630 series, the active logic is all in the pods. The connectors on the
flywires are proprietary HP parts with a mechanical latch to lock them into the
pods. but I've seen multiple mentions in discussion groups of folks using stock
Molex connectors to connect to the pods.
--Bill
F
Hi, Rod.
>I always confuse 8/i and 8/L. Which one did you want?
>I know Oscar and I'm sure he said he had no problem with me doing full size
>panels as he only did the cut down version.
The PDP-8/I. The 8/I panel has indicators for the multiplier-quotient register
(for the EAE), instruction an
I received one of the new panels from Rob, and it is nearly indistinguishable
from the original. It captures the matte finish of the original exactly.
Fantastic!
>_PDP-8 New Products under consideration _
>
>1. Front panels for any of the other PDP-8 models, Including the
>Straight 8 but excl
>Do you have 5 volt I/O with the OberonStaion FPGA?
>I was thinking of using it as general FPGA card.
The serial port is 3.3v according to the website. I haven't attempted to use
the serial port or the GPIO pins, but I believe they are all 3.3 volts for the
Spartan 3 series. Check the data sh
Here is an idea I haven't tried, but might work: Take some unoiled paper or
mylar tape and punch it with rubouts. Spray one side with spray-on photo
mounting adhesive just before use. It would definitely leave a thick spot in
the repaired tape, but I suspect it would hold up long enough to p
There is reputedly an open-source toolchain for the Lattice ICE40, based on
reverse-engineering the bitstream:
http://hackaday.com/2015/05/29/an-open-source-toolchain-for-ice40-fpgas/
Industry leaders Xilinx and Altera remain closed as always.
--Bill
From: Mouse
To: cctalk@classiccmp.org
[Yahoo's webmail client garbled the last link -- resending]
The revived 2013 re-issue of Niklaus Wirth's Oberon system is a joy to behold.
If you've never heard of Oberon before, it is a minimalistic education-oriented
language and operating system designed after Wirth had taken a (second)
saba
The revived 2013 re-issue of Niklaus Wirth's Oberon system is a joy to behold.
If you've never heard of Oberon before, it is a minimalistic education-oriented
language and operating system designed after Wirth had taken a (second)
sabattical at PARC in the 80's.
The new version runs on a cust
>According to the current owner it is based on a 16 bit machine made by
>Computer Automation. It has core memory and is programmed in assembler and
>Fortran. It is from the late seventies.
The packaging doesn't look like anything from Computer Automation, but they
made a line of board-level compo
> Wayne (ttyparts.com) and I had a disaster of a shipment on a ASR33, Fed Ex
> Ground did us no favors.
You are probably better off sending heavy shock-sensitive items on a pallet via
freight. A parcel invites being handled on a conveyor or dropped. A pallet
has to be handled with a forklift
>> "Press Release April 2015 Data Professionals of Pleasanton California has
>> been acquired by Heath Company and will focus on supporting vintage kits by
>> providing parts, modification, and even 'Certified Pre-Owned' Heathkits for
>> sale. Please watch our site for future developments."
>
>
Based on a hunch, I matched the feedback score of the winner of the restoraton
log to a known ebay buyer. I don't want to say who he is, but he's a serious
vintage collector who happens to have a passionate interest, deep pockets, and
and is a visible member of the community likely known by a f
Hi, Rob. I'll definitely take one of the panels. If you make another lot, or
your capacity is not otherwise oversubscribed, I'll take two of them.Thanks,
--Bill
From: Rod Smallwood
To: gene...@classiccmp.org
Sent: Saturday, June 6, 2015 3:41 PM
Subject: PDP-8/e front panels.
Hi G
21 matches
Mail list logo