HP-41 Unknown Interface - Printable Version +- HP Forums (https://archived.hpcalc.org/museumforum) +-- Forum: HP Museum Forums (https://archived.hpcalc.org/museumforum/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Old HP Forum Archives (https://archived.hpcalc.org/museumforum/forum-2.html) +--- Thread: HP-41 Unknown Interface (/thread-191982.html) |
HP-41 Unknown Interface - Juergen Keller - 08-27-2011 Somebody pointed me to this HP-41 with an unusual custom interface, see pictures. Has anybody seen such an interface before? Or does anybody even know what it is for? Any hints and suggestions welcome!
Re: HP-41 Unknown Interface - Mark Hardman - 08-27-2011 I looks like a cereal port used to dispense the barley for your lager unit. <Ducks>
Re: HP-41 Unknown Interface - Walter B - 08-27-2011 :-D Oh yes, such ports are really a big help for mankind. What a progress along the lines of consumer interest!
Re: HP-41 Unknown Interface - Randy - 08-27-2011 Based upon the position of the wires that I can see connected, the interface is a simple extension of the keyboard row and column matrix, allowing external switches to input data into the 41.
Re: HP-41 Unknown Interface - Andrés C. Rodríguez (Argentina) - 08-27-2011 Just guessing, it may be a "paralell keyboard matrix" interface, in which external switches simulate keypresses. A 3x3 matrix, allowing (for instance) for digits 1 to 9 (but not 0) can be done with six wires, as shown. If someone wanted to export the HP41 bus signals (clocks 1 and 2, Flag Input, Data, ISA) it would had make sense to pick them at one of the backplane ports
Again, this is just a quick guess.
Re: HP-41 Unknown Interface - Howard Owen - 08-27-2011 There appear to be three more wires, terminating somewhere on the reverse side of the circuit board. It's nine pins, built inside what looks like an HP/IL female connector.
Re: HP-41 Unknown Interface - Andrés C. Rodríguez (Argentina) - 08-27-2011 With three more wires a 5x4 matrix is possible, allowing for numeric data, decimal point, R/S and some more...
Re: HP-41 Unknown Interface - Ángel Martin - 08-28-2011 Wow, that's elaborate hacking - wonder if it's part of a data input mechanism different from the original keyboard - maybe an industrial bar-code reader?. I have no recollection of such being published anywhere, but yet, the 41 series was such a versatile platform - and this proves it again. Edited: 28 Aug 2011, 2:59 a.m.
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