Wednesday August 31st - 10 AM - Roll up sleeves -
Present were Ron Williams, Bob Erickson, Glen Lea, Allen Palmer, Frank King, Ron Crane, Robert Garner,
Bill Flora, Milt Thomas, Robert Feretich, Chuck Kantman, Ed Thelen. Interesting day - lets start with the revolution ;-))
- The Revolution - At lunch we discussed how to get more done faster - we do not seem to be gaining ground on CPU debug.
Problem: on average for the past several months, there seems to be one bad card found per session,
and it seems that one more card fails per session. Not good!!
So - we decided to start testing the SMS cards in the 1401 processor, with the following guide lines -
- Examine/verify the "Unit Plugging Charts", one per gate, about 32 gates?, more copies made
- Test all cards of one type per gate at a time - Ron Crane to determine how to test?
- Replace passed cards back into the same slot. - mark? record? repair history of cards, if so need serial #s?
- Have more than one testing/debugging session per week - Ron Crane started to analyze the "Unit Plugging Charts"
- All cards to be replaced into machine at the end of each session
- Allen, Chuck and Glen finally got part of the 729 magnetic clutch off the shaft. There was much force used
and the Woodruff key needs replacement.
- Ed ran to various stores to get - neon indicators for Bill Flora, Woodruff keys for Allen, "canned air" to blow dust,
and basically does not know what was going on - what else is new? :-|
- Work continued on, the 1402 (one of the timing lights was so weak as to be useless - a festering problem - it was replaced, no help
- the driver tube had been tested as OK several months ago - and also replaced),
1406 addressing problem, 077 collator - I was shopping and Xeroxing and don't know the particulars -
- After most folks left, Bill Flora removed 1402 timing amplifier which already had new tested tube,
Ron Crane examined the operation of the circuit and determined that the amplifier was OK and driving both
neon lamps with enough current. Ed determined that the timing light
was indeed bright, but you still could not see it adequately through the timing slit. The light
was somehow not positioned correctly in the little holder. Now fixed. Whew!!
- Then Ron and Ed measured and scoped the input and output power of the Pacific Power frequency converter. About 10 KW and 4.5 KW
respectively. Ron said that 10 Kw heat from frequency converter and 1401 processor require about a 3 ton
air conditioner to remove - maybe add another ton for lighting, people, and other things
- the brutally noisy air conditioners
in the room already got us to thinking about replacement?
Thursday September 1st - 10 AM - a "Bonus" day -
- Robert Feretich & Ron Crane went it to debug some more - They found
- an open X or Y drive line in the bottom core plane of the 1406 8,000 character stack
they didn't see the exact break.
- a bad core driver transistor (open collector) - Ron replaced it.
- Fun info - like you need more trivia ;-))
- the parallel resistor across an X or Y drive line is 4 ohms
- the resistance of the X or Y drive line wire in the core stack is 2.5 ohms
Wednesday September 7th - 10 AM - Roll up sleeves -
Allen Palmer on vacation 'till 29th - Sicily & Venice :-))
Present were Chuch Kantmann, Bill Flora, Milt Thomas, Robert Feretich, Grant Saviers, Ron Williams, Frank King, Ron Crane,
Bob Erickson, Ed Thelen :-)). I list people and show pictures so that wives will not suspect the worst.
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The 1402 reader timing light did not get completely fixed :-((( Both lamps glow just fine statically, but one
fades in a few seconds when the disk is spun. Bill Flora and crew checked the disk slip rings, brushes, springs, ...
and gave up to do other things. Other things include the 1401 Read Card command causes a 1402 to pass a card
- whether data got transfered was not checked yet.
Ron W reports that one read card command causes the card reader
to start and not stop feeding cards, some read completion signal is missing?
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| Grant brought in a neat Effective Series Resistance (ESR) meter for us to use
in electrolytic capacitor checking, and also the 729 tape drive clutch
that he was working on. He says obtaining replacement sealed bearings for the tape drive clutch is
likely to be a major challenge -
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| Well - the 1403 carriage control works with the old carriage tape
- but not with the one we just punched ??? Ah - Ron says our carriage tape punch has different registration
than the one that punched the German carriage. A tweek of the brush assembly makes the
newly punched tapes work and the old German ones fail - lets go with what we can produce :-))
The 1401 can successfully command the printer to skip and space - I suppose you want it to print too? ??
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| The old power wiring in the 077 collator is pretty much crumbling - Bob Erickson is replacing it.
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bad picture :-((
| The 1401 processor guys get all the glory (and pressure) - and no picture this time.
However, Ron W reports that the Move Zero Suppress, which is really an edit command, works :-))
and command chaining works :-))
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After hours, Ron Crane played with power - see below - till 9:15 P.M.
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| Ron Crane calculated that if some transformer taps got changed, the Pacific Power amplifiers
would run closer to "rail-to-rail" giving improved conversion efficiency, saving power.
Here he is, deep into the guts of the Pacific Power converter :-((
He was correct, saved 2.1 kilowatts with the load of the 1401 & 1406 :-))
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| Ron Crane also measured the power going into the Liebert air conditioner, used
to cool this room - mostly to cool the
Museum's UPS (Uninterruptable Power System) and occasionally "our" 1401 system.
(We are under strict orders to leave the Liebert running when we leave!!)
With one of the two compressors going
(it goes all the time) and re-heat to control the humidity (seemingly all the time)
This is 460 volts, the three phases average 40 amps each. Here he is examining the power factor (just about 1.0).
Ron calculates that this unit - if running this way all year - costs the museum
about $35,000 in electric power. :-|
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Thursday September 8, 2005 - a bonus day ;-)
Report from Grant Saviers :-))
Bob Feretich and I got all the counters working in the TAU [Tape Adaptor Unit] ... . 3
bad TAU modules total Wed & Thurs. We are finding many ALD errors (or
we haven't figured out how IBM names the card gates (swing out frames),
although finding a single flip flop module split onto two gates in the
prints does not appear to be our error :-( ).
We are also missing some module schematics, 2 or 3 I think out of the 10 or so we looked
for. Are there other documents sources to explore to remedye these
problems?
Ron Williams replaced Grant, and further TAU progress was made. Ron says Bob F. and Grant show great promise :-))
Wednesday September 14th - 10 AM - Roll up sleeves -
Present were Milt Thomas, Frank King, Bill Flora, Bob Feretich, Ed Thelen, Bob Erickson, Ron Williams,
Grant Saviers, Chuck Kantmann, Ron Crane, Don Cull. Frankly, I arrived late, and got caught up in Ron Crane's study of the
environment of the 1401 room. Apparently someone has turned off the re-heat part of the humidity control, which
will reduce the expense of cooling the museum's UPS system to maybe $23,000 a year. :-)) By the time we got
back from visiting with museum people, the rest of the workers had gone home and I don't know of progress.
Wednesday September 21st - 10 AM - Roll up sleeves -
Attendee list from Robert Garner - Bob F, Ron W, Bill F, Grant, Frank, Chuck, Ron C, Ed T., Robert G.
| Here is an overview/index of ALDs (Automated Logic Diagrams)
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The 1402 card reader works, the correct stuff gets into memory :-)) The read cards capability was rather sudden,
from all sorts of troubles to miracle in one session :-))
Saturday September 24th - 10 AM - Roll up sleeves - (4th Saturday)
Allen Palmer is back :-))
Wednesday September 28th - 10 AM - Roll up sleeves -
Attendees - Ron Williams, Bob Feretich, Grant Saviers, Robert Garner, Allen Palmer, Don Cull,
Bill Flora, Glen Lea, Ed Thelen. Special guest - Len Shustek,
CHM Chairman of Board visited for a while - fortunately we were mostly behaving ;-))
| Ron Williams presents this brief history of the physical restoration activities.
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| Bill Flora and Don Cull (and Ron Williams) got the 1402 to punch a card. Unfortunately, the card
should have been blank - something about punch bails hanging up - [ It turned out that several SMS cards driving
the punch magnets were defective and hung in the ON state. Replacing the cards permitted punching blank cards.
The next test, later, will be to try to punch holes in all of the columns. ;-)) ]
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| Paul Pierce of Portland, OR very kindly sent one of his 729 tape cables so that Ron Feretich, Ron Crane,
and Grant Saviers can make a 729 tape simulator to help test the TAU (Tape Adaptor Unit) in the 1401 computer box.
This image shows the cable end minus the exterior metal housing. What you are looking at weighs more than a current lap top.
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go to Schedule 2005 October - December