[rescue] On The Hunt: SBUS Transputer Link Card

Richard Edwards ejb at trick-1.net
Thu Dec 3 18:14:06 CST 2015


very interested however I think shipping to Australia would be an issue. 

Keep me posted if no takers, I do have ways to collect and use this
whole system.

On Fri, 4 Dec 2015, at 10:58 AM, Dave McGuire wrote:
>   Ok, that's *exactly* within the focus of the Large Scale Systems
> Museum.  If it's available, I'll definitely head up there to pick it up.
> 
>               -Dave
> 
> On 12/03/2015 06:43 PM, Bob Krzaczek wrote:
> > Back in July of 2010, I posted here to unload a Parsytec cluster that
> > was saved from the recycler.  I think it was Ian Finder that found it
> > prohibitively expensive to ship cross country, but maybe someone else
> > is closer?  It's pretty nontrivial...
> > 
> > Digging through this, I found an off-list email from Damien Carlier
> > from earlier this year.  Damien, if you're still out there, I
> > apologize so much for letting that thread go silent.  Please reply to
> > this thread if you're at all interested!  Richard, Dave, I think
> > Damien should get first dibs, and then you two can rumble.
> > 
> > I ***really*** don't want to part this out, little by little; I'd
> > rather see it go intact to a good home... or at least in big chunks.
> > I know you two are only interested in the SBUS link card, but if you
> > or anyone else on the Rescue list would take more, I'd really
> > appreciate it.
> > 
> > The decription is copied below.  All but the Exabyte is still around,
> > I believe.  They loved themselves some 8mm when they were using this
> > gear.
> > 
> >     Having been the recipient of some recent good will, I'm going to
> >     try and keep this ball rolling.  "Paying it forward," if you will.
> > 
> >     36 node Parsytec parallel computer, in three MC-3 cabinets.  Each
> >     cabinet weighs somewhere around 65 lbs, and is about 9-1/2" high,
> >     22" wide, and 23-1/2" deep.  They stack, of course.
> > 
> >     Each MC-3 contains 12 TPM-MPC processor boards.  Each board has a
> >     T805 Transputer, a PPC 604, and 32 MB local RAM.  There's a spare
> >     (37th) board, too.
> > 
> >     All the manuals, all the cabling.  Software, too, and I'll throw
> >     in the Exabyte 8mm tape drive that the software is on.
> > 
> >     These were the systems with the programmable backplanes.  You
> >     could arrange your processors in a star, a cube, daisy chain, etc.
> >     Pretty cool.  Heck, I'll even fish around and dig up the Axil
> >     (SPARCstation 5 clone) system that front-ended it, if you want.
> >     :-)
> > 
> >     Come on, you know you want to... *laugh*
> > 
> >     Bob
> > 
> > I might be able to still dig up an/the Exabyte drive, but I'm nearly
> > certain that everything else offered there is still intact.
> > 
> > The zipcode here is 14623.
> > 
> > Cheers,
> > Bob
> > 
> > 
> > --
> > Bob Krzaczek, Chester F. Carlson Center for Imaging Science, RIT
> > phone +1-585-4757196, email krz at cis.rit.edu, icbm 43.08586N 77.67744W
> > 
> > [demime 1.01d removed an attachment of type application/pgp-signature which had a name of signature.asc]
> > _______________________________________________
> > rescue list - http://www.sunhelp.org/mailman/listinfo/rescue
> > 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
> New Kensington, PA
> _______________________________________________
> rescue list - http://www.sunhelp.org/mailman/listinfo/rescue


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