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- Newsgroups: alt.sys.pdp8
- Path: sparky!uunet!cis.ohio-state.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!news.columbia.edu!watsun.cc.columbia.edu!lasner
- From: lasner@watsun.cc.columbia.edu (Charles Lasner)
- Subject: Re: Schematics for an M8330 board?
- Message-ID: <1992Nov17.041733.14022@news.columbia.edu>
- Sender: usenet@news.columbia.edu (The Network News)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: watsun.cc.columbia.edu
- Reply-To: lasner@watsun.cc.columbia.edu (Charles Lasner)
- Organization: Columbia University
- References: <71yU03KebbFk00@amdahl.uts.amdahl.com>
- Distribution: na
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 04:17:33 GMT
- Lines: 151
-
- In article <71yU03KebbFk00@amdahl.uts.amdahl.com> paulp@uts.amdahl.com (Paul Popelka) writes:
- >
- >Hi,
- >
- >I just bought a pdp 8/m and I'm trying to get it working.
- >When I got it home I discovered that someone had put the
- >M8330 timing generator module in backwards and, it looks
- >like they then powered it up. This fried one 7401 chip.
- >I'm going to replace it, but I assume other chips will
- >be bad too.
- >
- >So, to find the rest of the bad chips I probably will need
- >a schematic for this board, and maybe others. Does anyone
- >out there know where I can get a copy of the schematic (for
- >the M8330 or better yet the whole machine)?
- Lotsa readers have schematics of the card, for at least one viable revision of
- the card.
-
- I have a general question about ECO's to the CPU cards to address to the
- those more familiar with newer logic families:
-
- One of the major upgrades to the CPU cards involves a wholesale upgrade of
- chips generally from 74H to pin-compatible 74S, and minimally changing some
- of the bypass caps to larger values. Apparently this tightens up some
- buss timing critical to operation in long busses, etc.
-
- My understanding of Schottky logic is that S series chips are rather gross,
- in that they generate lots of switching current that can induce unwanted
- signals in lead runs, that can cause unreliable results, etc. So, is the
- etch of the affected boards "worthy" of this upgrade, or is doing so sort-of
- trading in one form of unreliability for another? I have seen boards with
- elaborate grounding techniques when S chips were used, and these caps are
- really rather "dinky" compared to that, and even have leads longer than
- necessary, as compared to the usual glass caps that resemble diodes (with
- smaller capacitance values; I think .01 as compared to .25.)
-
- An additional question:
-
- Is perhaps a newer logic family a better alternative? Can someone
- post all of the compatible variants so we can get a feel for what is
- suitable/not suitable? I am aware of:
-
- Plain 74xx
- 74L
- 74H
- 74S
- 74LS
- 74ALS
- 74C
- 74HCT
- 74F
-
- Someone suggested that 74F would be the best improvement, and would be better
- than 74S for the upgrade of these cards. Any opinions, please?
-
- Incidentally, for certain 74H chips, there is apparently no substitute!
- In the specific case of 7401 and 7400, the 74H01 and 74H00 are *NOT* pin-
- compatible! Do the newer logic families tend to follow the regular 74xx
- chips or the 74H chips relative to these discrepancies?
-
- Related topics:
-
- SP chips were widely used in these cards as bus drivers/receivers. The SP-380
- is an inverting bus receiver, which was "upgraded" to the 8640 by Signetics,
- and is a common Q-bus receiver chip. However, at least the following chips
- are "orphaned" and need sources of replacement:
-
- SP-314 is an 8-input AND gate (NAND?) to decode the bus for device selector
- applications. All inputs are conditioned as in 8640
-
- SP-384 is pin-compatible with SP-380, but it is *non*-inverting. (One does
- an OR function of two inputs, so the other does an AND (NAND?) of them.)
-
- Less often seen, but occasionally needed are:
-
- SP-317 and SP-391, but I don't remember the functionality.
-
- Additionally, most output drivers where originally selected 7401 chips noted
- by a leading select digit of 9 (97401). This was upgraded to the 8881, which
- is also a popular Q-bus driver. In fact, there is an additional chip used
- as a bidirectional driver called 8641, that combines some of the functionality
- of both the 8881 and 8640. It's used is the MM-8AB memory, and many Q-bus
- cards.
-
- An additional problem: The SP-384 is involved in a CPU upgrade: the gradeout
- digit specified internal to DEC was 5, thus the chips read 5384. But this
- turns out to be insufficient if the application includes certain fast
- interfaces such as the RK8E, and thus requires upgrading the spec to 7384.
-
- How are we to get a decent supply of these chips? I personally will fund
- part of a "spares" store if someone can locate a vendor for them. I would
- assume that the other chips, which are mostly standard 74xx chips except
- for the designer series (see below) and the stated SP and related chips,
- are readily available or can be substituted by one of the newer types directly.
-
- Designer series:
-
- Virtually all of the chips that start with the digit 8 are part of what was
- originally designated by Signetics as the "Designer Series" of chips. Mostly
- they are standard TTL compatible with 74xx, but the functionality is different,
- often allowing for a more sensible pin arrangement relative to the actual
- way a chip gets used (avoiding land runs under chips, etc. or plate-through
- holes, etc), or for more functionality in the package, such as a shift
- register that has buss-driver worthy outputs or inputs, etc. Most of the
- chips have numbers like DS 82xx. Note the "DS" in the front of the chip
- numbers. This causes confusion at most electronics vendors because they
- are assuming these are Intel support chips' numbers, since the 4 digits
- are identical (such as DS 8272 as opposed to 8272).
-
- So, we need an ongoing source of all of these problem chips to maintain the
- Omnibus boards.
-
- Some core memory boards use some obscure hybrid chips, that are mostly
- plane terminators, etc., and are essentially a DEC custom product, so if
- they break, you lose, but all of these other chips are products that were
- offered to the industry in a generic way, and it was probably reasonable
- for DEC to choose them for use in their designs. Clearly the concepts
- present in the chips (high-impedance input with hysteresis, low-leakage
- open-collector drivers, etc.) are what is in current usage, although likely
- in even more compact chip cases. Clearly, a new design for an Omnibus
- peripheral could be accomplished with fewer total chips in any design, but
- what of maintaining existing boards?
-
- >
- >Has anyone had any experience with what putting a board in
- >backwards can do to the rest of the machine?
- >
-
- The boards really don't fit backwards, so someone must have forced it.
-
- I do have experience with boards put in upside down!
-
- The middle board of the RK8E board set says on it "TOP" for a very good
- reason. It can be inserted upside down because it has 8 finger edges and
- no handles. A field circus guy failed to heed this and then turned on
- the 8/e. Sparks flew from the board, and eventually we say about 8-9
- destroyed lands on the board. For those familiar with the RK board set,
- they use smaller than average land size, and it is quite a pain to remove
- chips from this board, even with a vacuum desolder. Most people elect
- to dyke the chips out and just remove the pins rather than risk ruining the
- plated-through holes.
-
- I eventually repaired such a card, using #30 wire-wrap wire as replacement
- runs for the destroyed wires. I replaced about a half-dozen chips before I
- got it to work. (Possibly a few were replaced in error, but you have to
- guess a little sometimes; the RK has a few operations that are hard to
- get to cycle to look at on a scope.)
-
- A power supply fuse was also blown (I think +15), but no other damage!
-
- cjl
-