> Wow, sorry about that... Do folks here have an alternative service they
> like/recommend for sharing linked photos to the list?
>
They work fine for me in the "New" Edge, Chrome and Firefox. Noel, do you
have the updated Chromium based Edge or "Legacy" edge ?
Not sure why they don't work for Noel in edge. If anyone still has the old
now called "Legacy" Microsoft Edge note it is no longer supported or updated
and its probably time to ditch it ...
https://www.theverge.com/2021/3/9/22321779/microsoft-edge-legacy-spartan-bro
wser-support-ended
In my experience some one has issues with every photo sharing site I have
used.
> cheers,
> --FritzM.
>
>
Dave
> From: From: Fritz Mueller
> two solutions come to mind -- the one you mention here with nut and
> washer, or inserting a hex-head machine screw in the other direction.
> Either the nut or the hex-head screw could then be secured with a small
> combination wrench.
Well, if you put the bolt in first (which you'd kind of have to do, if going
>from front to back, with the adapter already mounted to the KY11-L), you'd
have to hold it in place while you offer the KY11-L up to the BA11-K. Which
was why I was originally thinking, put the bolt in in the other direction,
which you can do after you put the KY11-L+adapter in place.
But that brings up another idea: put the bolt in place (on the adapter), use
a first (thin) nut (with washer, if necessary) to hold it in place, then bolt
the adapter to the KY11-L bezel, then mount the whole works up to the BA11-K.
Not sure which would work better. I'd probably go with the 'pointing forward'
bolt, and use a lock-washer (or one of those nuts with integral lock-washer),
and then you can mostly tighten with a Phillips driver from the rear. But the
extra washer might be easier to put together (if it doesn't push the KY11-L
bezel too far forward).
Noel
I have some old stuff, that's not really computer stuff, so this might
be the wrong forum to ask.
But it might be the right people.
1. Sears Model 564.21600300 monaural portable tape cassette player,
with external mic and switch. It works, but it needs a new spindle
belt. Tape plays, but only the capstan advances it, so it gets tangled
up inside the box. I found a 5v power cube that works with it, even
though it says it wants 6v.
2. Sony SVR-2000 Tivo DVR. It appears to work, but I don't have the
remote, so it doesn't do anything other than cycle through its warnings
about not having been connected to the telephone and made the monthly
call to collect the fee.
3. Tivo Series 2 DT Digital Video Recorder, model TCD649080. Says
"Welcome! Powering Up..." but I waited for half an hour and it didn't
do anything else. It was connected to my network (the lights on the RJ-
45 socket were blinking) but my router couldn't see it. I have the
remote for this.
Any of these are yours for the price of shipping -- or local pickup in
91214.
Van Snyder
van.snyder at sbcglobal.net
>> From: Fritz Mueller
>> my brackets just have a punched oval hole at the bottom, and not a
>> "tapped hole" per your description above.
> The adapters on mine look _almost_ identical to yours, but _definitly_
> have a #8 press fit threaded bushing at the bottom.
Now that I've thought about it for a bit, I wonder if you can use a
nut-and-washer in place of the press fit threaded bushing at the bottom (but
otherwise all the hardware,and insertion directions, will be the same); it
will be kind of difficult to get the nut in there with the KY11-L pressed up
to the front of the BA11-K (which is probably why they went to the press fit
threaded bushing) - maybe hold it with a pair of needle-nose?
Noel
PS: Thanks for the URL for the knob; I'm going to order a couple of spares
(the DEC originals have a tendency to break).
> From: Fritz Mueller
> Pictures of my brackets should be viewable at
> https://photos.app.goo.gl/wni3mDAQHozK9Ho27
I couldn't get them to display on my modern Window laptop, using either the
Edge or Explorer browsers. I had to get my wife to show them to me on her
Apple laptop. Not a great site to use for photos.
> The interesting/confusing bit for me is the bottom part... In the
> second picture you can see that my brackets just have a punched oval
> hole at the bottom, and not a "tapped hole" per your description above.
Odd. The adapters on mine look _almost_ identical to yours, but _definitly_
have a #8 press fit threaded bushing at the bottom. Then there are a pair of
holes in the folded-over bit, and a pair of machine screws go through
superimposed holes in the flat part, and into tapped holes in the KY11-L
bezel, which hold the adapter to the bezel. The 1" long #8 machine screw
then holds the adapter to the tabs in the BA11-K.
To do the other mounting hardware, in Henk's picture, there's a flat metal
plate, with i) a hole in each end, and ii) a threaded hole in the middle. Two
machine screws (#8, I thihk) hold the flat plate to the bezel, then another
screw (#10, maybe) holds that U-shaped piece in Henk's picture to the flat
piece, and then a pair of #10 screws hold that to the tabs in the BA11-K.
(All machine screws above face forward.)
>> I'm too burned out (COVID long haul) at the moment
> Something a lot of us are going to have to face in the upcoming
> months/years, it seems -- wishing you best!
Hey, it could be worse! :-)
Has the classic computers commuinity lost anyone to COVID? I know we've
lost a few in the last year, but I don't recall if any were COVID.
Noel
Hello all!
I am starting a new job next week and returning to a field where my
roots are (multimedia engineering, signal processing, etc).
Therefore I am vacating my studio workshop and ending a few projects I
was working on until recently. I have a lot of industrial and
enterprise server hardware to sell or give away FTAG (free to a good home).
FTAG: Toten GS Cabinet, 42u, 1000 mm Deep, 800mm Wide, 3 Fixed Shelfs +
2 Fan Units + Cable Management
800mm wide which is easier to work with than a 600mm. However being
1000mm deep it does it mean you can add 670mm servers. It's a
relatively large cabinet so you can fit pretty much most rack-mountable
servers.
It is packaged as a flat-packaged self-assemble rack cabinet in five
large, flat-packaged, boxes. I will of course help move them from my
office to your van (I recommend collection with a van or courier with van).
This item is among the first things I'm giving away because I need to
free up some room. This will make it easier to catalog and sell/give
away. I will be advertising other items too in the next few days.
Post code: N15 4QL (Seven Sisters and Tottenham Hale)
Any recommendations for other mailing lists or web forums to advertize
this offer are welcome too.
Thank you all!!
Kind regards,
Andrew
On 3/3/21 11:11 AM, Al Kossow via cctalk wrote:
>>/On 3/3/21 10:42 AM, Lee Gleason via cctalk wrote: />>//>>>/?? The auction starts at? more than I have in my computer budget this
month />>/I went ahead and bought these, but paypal contributions to my email
would be helpful />>/this is way more than I can afford as well. /
>He listed a 11D utilities source disk over the weekend, so that is on its way now too.
>I asked and he says he doesn't have any more 'red labeled' DEC disk packs.
Did you notice this auction? Looks like not all of his RSX11D stuff is red labelled. This one looks like it might hold a running system.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/PDP-11-RK05-RSX-11D-64K-DEC-Digital-PDP/3534108081…
--
Lee K. Gleason N5ZMR
Control-G Consultants
lee.gleason at comcast.net
Hi all,
I'm reassembling an PDP-11/34 in a BA11-K chassis right now, and am a little puzzled by the front mounting brackets (the ones that hold a KY11-L of either sort on the bottom, and a half trim-panel on the top). In particular, on the bottom half, the available place for screws to go to attach the bracket to the chassis is nearly completely blinded by an overhanging tab.
The engineering drawings I've seen are unfortunately not very clear on this... Anybody have an 11/34 in a BA11-K and care to take a peek and tell me how the hardware here is properly configured? (Hex head instead of DEC's ubiquitous Phillips truss, to allow tightening from the side? Machine screw from back, and a nut on the front? Other?)
cheers,
--FritzM.
> From: Fritz Mueller
> I'm reassembling an PDP-11/34 in a BA11-K chassis right now, and am a
> little puzzled by the front mounting brackets (the ones that hold a
> KY11-L of either sort on the bottom, and a half trim-panel on the top).
> In particular, on the bottom half, the available place for screws to go
> to attach the bracket to the chassis is nearly completely blinded by an
> overhanging tab.
> ..
> Anybody have an 11/34 in a BA11-K and care to take a peek and tell me
> how the hardware here is properly configured?
Well, I have an KY11-LA mounted on a BA11-K; the KY11-LA and -LB use the
same bezel, and should have identical hardware.
There's an intermediate 10" or so high adapter piece (one either side, of
course) mounted to the KY11-L. (That's attached to the KY11-L with short
machine screws which are inserted from the rear, and go into tapped holes in
the KY11-L bezel.) That piece attaches to the BA11-K with different hardware
at the top and bottom: on the bottom, a single 1" or so machine screw (#8, I
think) goes through the vertical tab on the side at the front of the BA11, to
a tapped hole in the adapter piece. At the top, a pair of short countersunk
machine screws (#10, I think - definitely larger than the 1" machine screw at
the bottom) attach a pair (one each side) of those black plastic mounting
widgets which have a pair of balls on stalks; those go into holes on the back
of the blank panels, and those screw also hold the adapter piece to the
BA11-L at the top. (I looked for the DEC formal name for those pieces, but
couldn't find it.)
> I'll get some pictures of the brackets I have, too -- maybe they aren't
> the standard/correct ones for an 11/34...
I'll take a look. I'm too burned out (COVID long haul) at the moment to take
pictures or do a drawing right at the moment; if needed, I can do it tomorrow
(or so).
Noel
PS: A while back you were after measurements on the KY11-L power knob;
did you ever get those: If not, I've got one, and can measure it.
> From: William Donzelli
> Sellers of collectibles and antiques get bombarded with nitpicks and
> corrections. Often these are right, but often they are wrong.
Yeah, that's why I didn't just assert 'this is wrong, X is right', but I gave
them the things to look at so they could verify for themselves that my claim
was correct.
> Passing a URL through the Ebay system is trickly, to say the least
> ... "Check this document 123-456-78 in bitsavers, page 26".
Yeah, I didn't try and pass a URL, too hard; (and in any case, a tricky con
artist could point to a fake document they had posted). I guess I should have
said 'Check the PC05 manual, look on BiSavers in dec/foo/bar to find it, pg.
xyz'.
> From: Bill Degnan
> I went to this guys place and saw the tape reader first hand. Its in
> better condition than mine.
Oh, I didn't have a problem with the condition; just that it was
incorrectly labelled.
> From: Jay West
> I would think the thing that would make it stand out and make him
> change it - tell him a PC05 doesn't connect to a PDP8, it goes with
> something completely different (a PDP11 ofc, correct?).
Yes, the PC05 is for the PDP-11 (and others):
https://gunkies.org/wiki/PC04/PC05_High-Speed_Paper-Tape_Reader/Punch
Yes, what I _should_ have done is say 'the PC05 is for the PDP-11; the PC04
(which this is) won't work on a PDP-11. If a PDP-11 owner buys this for his
PDP-11, he'll probably by unhappy'.
Noel