On Wed, 8 Dec 2021, Monty McGraw wrote:
I have this terminal in my garage - sitting on its custom stand.
That's a plain standard current loop telex machine using CCITT2 code. The
more modern electronic version of it is the T1000 (that was available as
5-bit CCITT2 and 8-bit ASCII).
Christia
Dominique,
Well, that is in principle very easy.
You need a COM port (or simulator) and a little box converting RS232 to
50 BPS serial. Diagrams can be found everywhere. But you could also
look at www.i-telex.net. This is a (primarily) german "band of
brothers". They have set up an internation
>Please note : all mecanial Siemens machines I've seen, use 40 mA. Not
60 mA.
/Nico
On 2021-12-09 00:21, Curious Marc via cctalk wrote:
Dominique,
Nice to see your machine working so well! I like how it lights up from the
inside. To connect it to a computer, you could simply get a Volpe board
Oh great ! But a little bit noisy to use like that ;)
Well, I'm interested by your software anyway !
Dominique
On 9/12/2021 11:00, nico de jong via cctalk wrote:
Dominique,
Well, that is in principle very easy.
You need a COM port (or simulator) and a little box converting RS232
to 50 BPS seri
Hello Dominique
If you send me your e-mail address, I can start with sending you the
user manual, so you can what the software does
This software has an interface to i-telex.net, so you can use it for
international chats
It also has a lot of other functions, but it would take too long to list
i
d...@skynet.be
Thanks !
Dominique
On 9/12/2021 11:21, nico de jong via cctalk wrote:
Hello Dominique
If you send me your e-mail address, I can start with sending you the
user manual, so you can what the software does
This software has an interface to i-telex.net, so you can use it for
intern
On 2021-12-09 11:26, Dominique Carlier via cctalk wrote:
On 9/12/2021 11:00, nico de jong via cctalk wrote:
Sent !
Hello Tony,
> The power bricks draw very little current with no load on the output and 2.5A
> would be fine to power one up.
Are you saying that I can test them with no load? I thought they would need
some load?
>
> Most, if not all, of the power bricks start by rectifying and smoothing the
The NI GPIB-410 is also often available cheaply, it's basically the ISA
version. I believe I saw the drivers for it on NI's FTP server when I was
looking for the manual.
Thanks,
Jonathan
‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
On Thursday, December 9th, 2021 at 01:50, Rodney Brown via cctalk
wrote:
On Thu, Dec 9, 2021 at 12:26 PM Rob Jarratt wrote:
>
> Hello Tony,
>
> > The power bricks draw very little current with no load on the output and
> > 2.5A
> > would be fine to power one up.
>
>
> Are you saying that I can test them with no load? I thought they would need
> some load?
I'm pretty
> From: Jay Jaeger
> Also, if someone (else, presumably) does up a replica of the indicator
> panel board (perhaps with the option to use LEDs, with some resistor
> packs that could be bypassed for lamps
Two points.
First,there's the question 'are you trying to produce somethi
On Wed, Dec 8, 2021 at 10:50 PM Rodney Brown via cctalk
wrote:
>
> NI National Instruments PCI-GPIB+ Analyzer PCI IEEE488.2 Interface Card
>
> While a photo shows the Windows NI Analyzer software in use, the item
> doesn't mention it.
>
> If NI will provide the analyzer software, these could be us
About the software:
I bought a couple of that seller's cards; one each of 284088568161 &
284088570014.
Asked him about the software. Here's his reply.
Regarding your question about the Analyzer software, if I recall correctly it
comes bundled in the "NI-488.2" software package. I believe
Many years ago, a friend gave me an Overland T490 tape drive which has
some kind of autoloader attached which takes ten tapes. I was told it
came out of a Tandem system. The tapes are square cartridges similar
but different to a DEC TK50. I can't find very much information about
the drive on the
Noel said
> The only PDP-11 devices which used indicator panels which I know of were:
>
> - the DX11 (I don't think anyone's got one of those)
> - the RF11 (ditto - although Guy was discussing emulating one at one point)
> - the RP11 (but the indicator panel is built into the controller rack there,
> From: Steven Malikoff
> Was there ever an indicator panel for the RC11? .. I have a set of RC11
> modules .. No backplane though. I've not found any docs for these, I
suppose
> they're probably on bitsavers and have overlooked them.
Looking at the manual and engineering drawing
On 12/9/21 3:20 PM, Peter Coghlan via cctalk wrote:
Many years ago, a friend gave me an Overland T490 tape drive which has
some kind of autoloader attached which takes ten tapes. I was told it
came out of a Tandem system. The tapes are square cartridges similar
but different to a DEC TK50. I c
On Thu, Dec 9, 2021 at 4:47 PM Noel Chiappa via cctalk
wrote:
> - the DX11 (I don't think anyone's got one of those)
Technically correct, I have _two_. But alas nothing to connect them to.
-tony
On 12/9/2021 7:49 PM, Noel Chiappa via cctalk wrote:
> From: Steven Malikoff
> Was there ever an indicator panel for the RC11? .. I have a set of RC11
> modules .. No backplane though. I've not found any docs for these, I
suppose
> they're probably on bitsavers and have over
On 12/9/21 8:15 PM, Jay Jaeger via cctalk wrote:
One could perhaps emulate the RS64 data stream using a fast-enough
micro, ala the MFM emulator.
Why does everyone seem to want to emulate HW like this with a micro when
a reasonable FPGA implementation with some external FRAM would do the jo
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