-- Jonathan Engdahl Rockwell Automation Principal Research Engineer 1 Allen-Bradley Drive Advanced Technology Mayfield Heights, OH 44124 http://users.safeaccess.com/engdahl jrengdahl_at_safeaccess.com "The things which are seen are temporary, but the things which are not seen are eternal." II Cor. 4:18 ----- Original Message ----- From: "Tony Duell" <ard_at_p850ug1.demon.co.uk> To: <classiccmp_at_classiccmp.org> Sent: Wednesday, January 23, 2002 7:19 PM Subject: Re: HP16C > > > > That's the "hexalator", right? Mine finally gave up the ghost from overuse. > > The 'voyagers' (HP10C, 11C, 12C, 15C, 16C) went through various hardware > versions. The earliest ones have a separate logic module built on a > flexible PCB clamped to the display the connects to the keyboard via a > zebra strip connector. Later versions put everything on one PCB. And the > even later versions (12C only I think -- the others having been > discontinued by then) put everything into one chip. > > The older machines contain 2 chips. The smaller one is the 'Nut' CPU. > This is very similar to the CPU used in the HP41, for example. The CPU > also contains the keyboard scanning circuitry. > > The larger chips is called 'R2D2' (seriously!). It stands for > 'ROM/RAM/Display Driver'. It's everything else. ROM containing the code > to make the machine behave as a 16C (or whatever). RAM for user programs > and data. And the LCD driver. > > FWIW, Voyagers suffer from bad connections. On the separate logic module > versions. always clean the zebra strip before doing anything else. If > that doesn't help, or if it's all one one PCB, then try resoldering the > chips (fine surface-mount connections). I've had a lot of dry joint > problems in this series. > > -tony > >Received on Wed Jan 23 2002 - 21:36:58 GMT
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