IBM RT 6150?
Philip Belben
philip at axeside.co.uk
Sun Mar 9 03:40:52 CST 2008
Jason T wrote:
> Well I finally got the IBM - mine is a 6151/115. Not sure what the
> last digits signify. Original hard drive? I didn't think it's like
> IBM to put the hard drive size on the faceplate like that.
Well done! I have the floor standing one, the 6150.
As someone said, 115 is a model number. It tells you a lot, if you can
look it up, but I don't have much 6150 documentation, so I don't think I
can.
> Keyboard connector - definitely odd. Fortunately the 'board itself is
> a regular Model M, which made replacing the keys damaged in shipping
> easy. Unfortunately the cable is not modular on the keyboard end, so
> I'll have to make sure to keep it out of range of the cats :)
>
> The mouse looks like a strange connector, too. Unfortunately I got no
> mouse with the system :(
I seem to recall that the 6150 had ribon-header style connectors for
practically everything, in a little metal shell, and the whole thing in
a rubber moulding that keyed with the appropriate hole in the back panel.
The mouse port seems to be serial at RS232 levels. I have the IBM part
number for the mouse (somewhere). I phoned IBM to see if I could order
one, and they said it was discontinued, and the replacement (I suspect a
PS/2 mouse with an adaptor) would be 150 pounds. They woudln't tell me
the part number of the replacement, or of the adaptor, so I gave up at
that point.
Interesting that you got a standard keyboard. Mine has the standard
layout, but slightly different key profile and different colours.
> Don't know how much RAM I've got. How can I tell? The system doesn't
> turn the display on until AIX is booting, so if there's a POST screen
> I can't see it.
Isn't there a 7 segment LED on the front for POST display? Don't think
it tells you the RAM, though. Best way to assess RAM is count the
chips, I'd think :-)
> As everyone noted, it is *heavy*! I'm used to heavy workstations from
> the mid-80s (Sun 3, SGI and the like) but this one tops the list, at
> least in my collection.
>
> There is what looks like the standard IBM 37-pin external floppy
> connector on one of the cards. Is that what it is? Or maybe for a
> tape drive? If it's the latter I may even have a drive for it...
I would think floppy. Floppy drives and stuff were very PC-ish on the 6150.
> All in all an interesting historical footnote machine. I booted it
> and played Hunt the Wumpus on it last night, so I'm happy with it. :)
I think all I ever managed to do with mine, apart from replace blown
diodes in the power supply, was run XINIT and do a screen dump to my
Proprinter XL. Amazingly, the Proprinter is one of the printers
supported with PIOBE. (PIOBE = Printer I/O Backend. IBM's solution to
having a common printer interface.)
Philip.
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