I shot this clip when I dropped a Chef Boyardee Mini Ravioli on the floor while dumping the can. I thought my cat would want it... She did not want it, and she made it quite clear where she thought it belonged...
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This is my 1965 SCM (Smith Corona Marchant) Cogito 240SR calculator. One of my favorite calculators... But it developed a fault after moving it. Bummer...
Unfortunately, as I said, it needs servicing. The machine won't load the accumulator output results (I think) into any register, even though I can manually load data into any register using the keyboard to load data into the "K" register, and the swap keys to manually swap the data between registers. The fact that it recalls ANYTHING at all suggests the delay line is okay. The machine's primary logic consists of 6 large square (about 9.25x10 inches on a side or about 23.5x25.4 cm) PC boards that consist of almost NOTHING BUT resistors, diodes, and transistors (and possibly some hybrid modules). No chips at all! There are 4 smaller PC boards that appear to be associated with the CRT display, and a small pair of PC boards that are related to the magnetostrictive delay line memory. All those boards, and it's wired with board to board plug in wires and cables. There is no simple socketed back plane. WHY can't things be simple!
I would love to map the schematic to this thing out. There are patent documents that describe the basic operation of the machine. Patent 3,518,629; Filed Feb. 6, 1964 and dated June 30, 1970, for Stanley P Frankel. I, and others, have yet to find any trace of actual service manuals or documentation. Only the very segmented diagrams included in the patent. I would LOVE to take my machine apart and map out the entire circuitry of the machine... It is... Most daunting...
A bit of trivia, Stan Frankel was involved with the Manhattan project, but lost his security clearance in the 1950s during the "Red scare" because of his views on making nuclear technology academically accessible for civilian development... The military was NOT keen on that idea. This barred him from the majority of computer related jobs, since nearly every computer application in the 50s was government or military connected. That led him to work with Marchant, who made mechanical calculators back then, to develop the Cogito 240SR electronic calculator.
Still... wow... I am utterly amazed by the skills of those computing pioneers, people who managed to come up with this stuff at a hardware level, and using such primitive technology!
Fortunately, if it's any consolation... the boards appear to have all the components very nicely laid out in a grid. No clue about the traces beneath.
I don't doubt I could map it out, given enough time and unfathomable levels of patience to do it. It's that it only uses about 3 or 4 major part types to perform logic! Even AFTER mapping out the schematic, I'd have to actually figure out and organize what diodes and resistors are grouped together, and what logic function they perform! I have no idea if there is any way to test the boards live either... They are not situated in a means that appears to make that simple. Hybrid modules are also troublesome... They are like chips with no datasheets. Joy.
At least it is still an amazing piece of history, and quite the sight to look at, even if it is not functioning at 100% anymore.
Pics of the inside of my Cogito 240SR:
http://richfiles.solarbotics.net/calc/CogitoOpen.jpg
http://richfiles.solarbotics.net/calc/CogitoInternal.jpg
http://richfiles.solarbotics.net/calc/CogitoCRT.jpg
http://richfiles.solarbotics.net/calc/CogitoPCB.jpg
http://richfiles.solarbotics.net/calc/CogitoWires.jpg
Details on the Cogito 240SR
http://www.oldcalculatormuseum.com/scm240sr.html
Frankel's Calculator Patent
http://www.google.com/patents/US3518629
History of Stanley Frankel
http://www.hp9825.com/html/stan_frankel.html
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I REALLY need to finish assembling my Voltage controlled PWM fan speed controller. Without the controller, my fan has one speed: tornado!
I will not be running the fan at 100% PWM... It'll be quieter
And to answer a few questions, it's an EBM Papst 46 Watt 24 volt reverse impeller blower. The original application was pressurization of the air/fuel mix for a boiler. Bought a pair NOS from Axman Surplus store in St. Paul MN. GREAT little surplus store, with a humorous knack for displays. Nothing like spinning severed doll heads mounted to gearmotors, with LEDs to draw attention to a sale! XD
Once I have the PWM controller built, I'll probably do a sound profile. I don't have proper measuring equipment though.
Since recording this, I decided to entirely redo the case, and now have 8 120mm PC case fans as intakes, Pulling air over TWO 10x10 inch pleated filters, instead of just one. The chassis for the motherboard has also been replaced. It is now designed to open up like a Power Mac G3, not unlike the door to an oven, with a hinge at the bottom. This new configuration also now allows full length GPU cards, and rests the motherboard flat when servicing it.
http://ax-man.com
http://www.ebmpapst.us/en/
I have NOT been paid by Ax-Man, or by any motor manufacturer... Good Lord, I wish I was! I have just been a repeat Ax-Man customer for years. It's a fun little brick and mortar surplus shop. Links are here just for reference.
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An Advanced Motion Controls drive runs an Exlar Brushless Motor. Even in the stopped position, it is impossible to turn the shaft by hand. The motor is too strong. Control is by a single pot, with the center point being the stop position, and each direction of the pot controls speed from full clockwise, to stop, to full counter clockwise.
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