IBM RT 6150?
Sridhar Ayengar
ploopster at gmail.com
Sat Mar 8 21:36:21 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.
IBM's standard way of marking machines is Type-Model. XXXX-XXX
The -XXX will tell you about its original configuration. CPU, memory,
disk, everything.
For example, an IBM 2007-AD1 (the machine I'm typing this on), is a
ThinkPad T60p with a/b/g wireless, 2GB RAM, 100GB 7200RPM SATA disk,
bluetooth, no fingerprint reader and ATI Mobility FireGL V5200 graphics.
Knowing just the type and model is enough to tell me all I need to
look *all* of that up.
Usually, the first digit of the model is a major revision, and the last
two refer to a specific configuration.
I have my doubts as to whether a drive as large as 115MB would have been
a common default factory configuration on that machine.
> 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 wouldn't worry about it, if you don't have a Megapixel card and
monitor. If you do, then it would be worth it to get a mouse.
> 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.
There's nothing there to see. IBM workstation posts didn't display
anything on the screen until *very* recently.
> 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.
Welcome to the world of IBM, with plastics heavier than steel.
> 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 can't help you there. I doubt any third-party tape drive would be
compatible, though,
> 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 don't know if I'd call it a footnote, since it led directly to RS/6000.
> It also had a Stallion 16-port RS-232 card in it, with breakout box,
> which I removed so as not to damage the cabling going to the box.
> Cool as it is, it's unlikely I will ever use more than one external
> serial device on this box, if any. Can anyone make use of this kit?
> I'd be happy to trade it for just about anything - help getting a copy
> of the O/S for this machine would be ideal. I believe these are all
> ISA slots, so perhaps it will work on a PC also? Here's a pic of the
> box:
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/chiclassiccomp/2318580337/
I'd be interested in that card, cable and box. Email me. We might be
able to come to an arrangement.
Peace... Sridhar
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