Yeah, 0.075" pin centers, does appear to be the ITT Cannon part.
Now what experiment used them, and _why_ (I mean, surely 68-pin SCSI would
have done the trick as well and been muuuuuuch cheaper), I don't know.
Adam
On Thu, Feb 27, 2020 at 6:37 PM Lawrence Stewart <stewart(a)serissa.com>
wrote:
Huh. New to me too, but Digikey links to the
datasheets, and they really
do mean DB.
They go up to DD100. They are called “double density”.
This reminds me of the circa 1990 “HIPPI” interface, or high performance
parallel interface. They typically ran at 50 MB/sec. The connectors were
two-row 100-pin D style. See
http://www.elpeus.com/scsi-cables/100pin-scsi-cable-hippi/3m-100pin-male-to…
for
example.
We used these cables and connectors on the first Alpha machines at Digital
to connect the 3Max front end processor to the ECL based Alpha
Demonstration Units, although the protocol was different. The connector
was about the biggest that would fit on a TurboChannel I/O card.
On 2020, Feb 27, at 7:04 PM, Dave Horsfall <dave(a)horsfall.org> wrote:
On Thu, 27 Feb 2020, Adam Thornton wrote:
I recently have pulled out of the trash a plugboard with a male and a
female D-Sub 52 connector. 3 rows of pins, 17-18-17. I took the
connectors off the board: there's nothing back there, so this thing only
ever existed so you could plug the random cable you found into it and its
friends to see what the cable fit.
That would be something like a DD-52P (certainly not a DB-52P!).
I can't find much evidence that a 52-pin D-Sub ever existed.
Well, Digikey seem to have them:
http://www.digikey.com/product-detail/en/itt-cannon-llc/2DB-52P/2DB-52P-ND/…
No photo, though...
-- Dave_______________________________________________
COFF mailing list
COFF(a)minnie.tuhs.org
https://minnie.tuhs.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/coff
_______________________________________________
COFF mailing list
COFF(a)minnie.tuhs.org
https://minnie.tuhs.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/coff