Look At This Weird Industrial Computer!

Ғылым және технология

Thanks PCBWay.com - I found a totally normal 90's computer. It's very normal, and not strange at all.
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#Pentium #Normal #DOScember

Пікірлер: 546

  • @michaelmarks1391
    @michaelmarks1391 Жыл бұрын

    Former CNC maintenance mechanic here. Mostly worked on Fanuc and Haas controls, but some Allen Bradley stuff as well. Machines can be extremely finicky about the generation, size, and type of media you use with them. Standard procedure for any compact flash or USB was to format them first on the machine you intend to use it with. Anything over 4gb was a big no-no, even though the hardware and file system should support it, it just wouldn't. Even if it was SMALL enough, sometimes it wasn't OLD enough, as newer CF cards would often have a different "generation" or "Version" or whatever. It was getting increasingly hard to find flash cards that were small enough and old enough to work with some of our machines. It surprises me not at all that no combination of flash/adapter works for you. Rockwell Automation (nee Allen Bradley) has a great knowledge base online, but you do have to register and some of which is not free. Surprisingly enough, a number of NC's run on modified x86 hardware and some even run on Windows, such as Mazak. I found that anything running on Windows worked as well as you might expect, especially compared to purpose-built embedded hardware like FANUC. Even if it is x86 hardware, you can't know what the NC builder changed firmware-wise, or has custom built onto the board.

  • @organiccold

    @organiccold

    Жыл бұрын

    What i though will be :)

  • @loganmacgyver2625

    @loganmacgyver2625

    Жыл бұрын

    didn't Rockwell also make the Turbo Encabulator?

  • @Zeem4

    @Zeem4

    Жыл бұрын

    @@loganmacgyver2625 Yes they did - the hydrocoptic marzelvanes effectively prevented side fumbling. However it's now been superseded by the Hyper Encabulator.

  • @0326Hambone

    @0326Hambone

    Жыл бұрын

    a few years ago, the company i worked for had a mass production CNC lathe line, These Muratec 120 (i think was the model) lathes had an auto gauge for measuring a cone angle after cutting. This was controlled by a panel mounted windows xp PC similar to the one in this video! Just a bit newer. It had a resistive touch screen and a few hard controls for power, zero'ing, e-stop, etc.

  • @FlameRat_YehLon

    @FlameRat_YehLon

    Жыл бұрын

    Got the feeling this is just for running FactoryView on, as it's just a generic panel without any specialized keys (unlike any of the CNC controller). Nowadays this kind of machine would be much smaller and with touch screen, but this is some old stuff.

  • @goo3r
    @goo3r Жыл бұрын

    Looks like an HMI (Human Machine Interface). I've not worked on any that old, but I used to do PLC and industrial process control and it's cool to see some of this older equipment.

  • @RisingRevengeance

    @RisingRevengeance

    Жыл бұрын

    I've also only used more modern variants. Much smaller and sleek but probably work just the same.

  • @markarca6360

    @markarca6360

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, it is. It is an Allen-Bradley HMI PC.

  • @postalUT

    @postalUT

    Жыл бұрын

    Definitely looks bucket sized. Gonna guess this was mounted in an MCC to operate the PLC.

  • @rolux4853

    @rolux4853

    Жыл бұрын

    I’ve worked on much older ones on automotive production systems from the mid 80s to late 90s. Mostly they were used to control the PLC on production lines with robots etc. I’ve also used very old ones on old CNC milling machines.

  • @GreenAppelPie

    @GreenAppelPie

    Жыл бұрын

    The variety of machines controlled with a IBM compatible PC architecture is endless. I’ve never seen an Apple based machine for whatever reasons

  • @tookitogo
    @tookitogo Жыл бұрын

    9:14 The DC-DC converter and the big gap in the ground plane of the PCB (visible as a lighter green line) mean it’s not an ordinary serial card, but one that’s galvanically isolated. The chips bridging the gap are optocouplers. The chip (or chips) directly connected to the pins of the connector are the serial transceiver(s) or line driver(s). Those are what determine whether it’s RS-232, RS-422, and/or RS-485 serial. (They come in varying levels of integration.) This is all super fresh in my mind because I just recently designed and built a device with a galvanically isolated RS-485 interface. Just delivered it to the customer last week and ran the cabling to the top of the cryogenic vessel it’ll sit atop. :)

  • @oldguy9051

    @oldguy9051

    Жыл бұрын

    > Just delivered it to the customer last week and ran the cabling to the top of the cryogenic vessel it’ll sit atop. :) Oh, so it is for standard applications? ;-)

  • @n_3719

    @n_3719

    Жыл бұрын

    its a profibus card. if you look closely you can see the profibus controller (aspc2)

  • @allangibson8494

    @allangibson8494

    Жыл бұрын

    All three are possible options. AllenBradley do make extensive use of the DH-485 protocol however. Profibus is electrically RS-485.

  • @Natomon01

    @Natomon01

    Жыл бұрын

    I thought that's what it might be; some kind of RS-485 or RS-232 comm-trunk (field-level-network or "FLN"). The machine might've been the management point for a network of secondary controllers. That, or it might've been part of a facility-wide FLN used to coordinate the actions of a host of controllers just like it from a central controller.

  • @tookitogo

    @tookitogo

    Жыл бұрын

    @@allangibson8494 It’s kinda neat how many different control systems use an RS-485 physical layer. Profibus, DMX, and studio digital audio, for example.

  • @MrCreeperAG
    @MrCreeperAG Жыл бұрын

    As someone working for a System Manufactering also making Industrial Computers: You would not believe the amount of hacks and trickery we get up to. From needing to repin a Backlight connector to fit a different manufactures standard over cascading adapters to cutting and resoldering power cables

  • @southernflatland
    @southernflatland Жыл бұрын

    I had the pleasure of working on an industrial plasma cutter computer from 1991. It had just been shipped back from their official repair company in Georgia, but apparently the shipping company dropped the system which bent the back of the case in, caused all the card slots to break, every expansion board in it completely shorting out the ISA bus, and the power supply fried. ☹️ Well, I managed to bend the casing back, I swapped the expansion cards over to other slots that weren't damaged, and of course I replaced the PSU. Then the system managed to POST but it wouldn't boot up their custom operating system. Not sure how else to proceed from there, we contacted the company it belonged to and informed them it runs again, but I had to go to their job site to finish troubleshooting it to get it booting again. And so I did, and it kept booting to like an immediate Kernel Panic error. I found myself looking at the rather ancient BIOS settings, not sure how it was all originally set. Then the company informed me they had another identical system up and running if I needed to check it's configuration. Awesome! So that's exactly what I did, and I found a major difference between the two machines. The one they had there already running had a 320MB hard drive, manually configured with the ancient CHS (Cylinders, Heads, Sectors) values. The system I was troubleshooting had a 4GB hard drive though. But they're supposed to be identical systems right? That's what the company told me anyways. So what's with the different hard drives here? 🤔 Well, I took a wild guess that the official repair company in Georgia could no longer find a suitable working 320MB drive and just used the next best thing they could find, and installed the manufacturer's original disk image onto that instead. So taking that wild guess, I copied the CHS values directly from the working 320MB system over to the one I was troubleshooting with the 4GB system. Success! It booted up just fine into their ancient CAD/plasma cutter software! Long story short, they apparently used a much larger drive than the original, I assume because they simply couldn't find any ancient 320MB drives working anymore. But hey, whatever works right?

  • @Ragnar8504

    @Ragnar8504

    Жыл бұрын

    Good old method from the 1980s! If your ancient BIOS didn't have a "custom" hard drive type you just picked the nearest one to the correct capacity of your new-fangled IDE drive and formatted it like that. And you'd better remember the type you used instead because that hard drive wouldn't boot with any other settings. I read up all that stuff when I started messing with obsolete PCs in the second half of the 90s, our neighbour gave me a huge pile of DOS magazines from the late 80s through early 90s that had a wealth of information, including a giant table of CHS values for pretty much all known MFM/RLL hard drives known at that time. I put that knowledge to work when asked to get a late-80s CNC mill back up and running in 2006. The computer was an oddball Mitsubishi 286 and its main fault was a flat CMOS battery. Unfortunately the setup wasn't built into the ROM but was supplied on a long-lost floppy disk. The computer itself wasn't too valuable but the software on the drive was. Based on the cables and age of the machine I guessed MFM and connected the drive to the controller in two of my 286s, no dice. Then I tried the drive and controller in my machine, nothing, would hang before I could even enter setup. I spent three days scouring the internet trying to find a setup and finally succeeded. Downloaded it from the internet, probably on my iBook, probably copied it onto a 3.5" floppy somehow, put that into a Pentium running Windows 98, created a bootable 5 1/4" floppy with the setup on it and used that on the Mitsubishi. Now all I had to do was try each and every hard disk type and reboot after every try to see if the machine would recognise the HDD. Fortunately it only took two attempts. That left me with the task of extracting the DOS software from the ancient drive and moving it onto something slightly more modern. Copying straight onto an IDE drive in the original machine was out of question because MFM/RLL and IDE can't co-exist in one machine to my knowledge, they're too similar. So I grabbed an ISA SCSI card and SCSI hard drive and xcopied the old drive's contents to my SCSI disk. Then I moved the SCSI disk to a Pentium 90 with a fresh DOS 6.22 install, copied the folder for the CNC to the new drive and that was it! Funny to think that Pentium is now older than the 286 was when I did that, if it still exists! It was probably close to 10 years old back then and that was 16 years ago. The 286 had a 1987 date on the board, so probably somewhere between that and 1989 or 1990.

  • @moconnell663

    @moconnell663

    Жыл бұрын

    I recently replaced the hard disk in an HP optical spectrum analyzer. I was able to use whatever drive I felt like using because I used a forensic disk interface system which allowed me to clone the original drive onto an SSD, bit for bit. The system didn't know the difference.

  • @southernflatland

    @southernflatland

    Жыл бұрын

    @@moconnell663 Okay, cool cool. But how truly compatible is that? Does it support both MFM and RLL formats? Does it support manual CHS configuration, or does it strictly rely on the BIOS to autodetect the drive? In my experience, those sort of adapter mechanisms are only compatible within a particular range of drive technologies. And I've never once seen such an adapter work with legacy MFM drives which need manual configuration. The thing is, even with an exact bit for bit clone, legacy systems still need manual configuration to know how to actually align the data into a coherent data stream. Does your 'forensic storage' device setup support manual CHS configuration? Cuz if not it probably won't do well with such ancient proprietary systems.

  • @moconnell663

    @moconnell663

    Жыл бұрын

    @@southernflatland I haven't worked with anything from the MFM era, so I have no insight to offer on that. All i know is that I used a Tableau forensic bridge to mount the drive (and IBM Travelstar 2.5" IDE disk) to a pc which prevented windows from doing anything that might alter the file system, and directly cloning the source drive to a "industrial" compact flash card. I might have had better luck with this method because the OSA already had a SCSI to IDE bridge adapter installed since god knows when. That might have taken up some of the compatibility errors. Apparently HP were the only ones who ever used 2.5" SCSI drives and someone had worked on it before me.

  • @Ryan.Lohman
    @Ryan.Lohman Жыл бұрын

    I remember seeing that type of computer doing water jet cutting - You may have to install the OS through the computer as some of the drives for that type of system were using some proprietary encrypted boot not compatible with fat32 (a floppy drive, Disk with DOS, and FDisk maybe your friend to get it to boot). Also I remember the thing running Windows NT

  • @robert1975031
    @robert1975031 Жыл бұрын

    there was an attempt to "Upgrade" the machine over it's life. the original fan probably died and was replaced, along with the hard drive. obviously the filter was just thrown out at some point. pretty neat construction though. I love the fact that the backlight was accessible.

  • @BBHexKey
    @BBHexKey Жыл бұрын

    Reason why those things are so expensive is because they're used in automation for large companies. If they have machines that haven't been adapted to newer modern controller systems, they have to rely on finding 1-1 replacements when their machines go down and they don't make them anymore so resellers get away with a high markup.

  • @wesleyandrews9198

    @wesleyandrews9198

    Жыл бұрын

    Tell me about it.

  • @tonybossaller4074
    @tonybossaller4074 Жыл бұрын

    Given the age of that computer, it may have the LBA limit where you cannot surpass 4g in drive size. You’d have to load up the compatibility program by the vendor to override. But if you have an old CF card, format a 2g volume. There was a limit before that at 540mb but that was pre-486 era so doubt that is at play here but similar fix.

  • @WarrenPostma

    @WarrenPostma

    Жыл бұрын

    I think the limit on these was even lower than 4g. I think there were bios bugs that prevented it addressing anything bigger than 400 megs.

  • @sadmac356

    @sadmac356

    Жыл бұрын

    Those sorts of limits are _fun_ I've found

  • @Nukle0n
    @Nukle0n Жыл бұрын

    I find that those straight CF to IDE thingies tend to not work really well, because they rely entirely on the CF card being 100% IDE spec which they very often are not. the SD to IDE adapters work much better because there's a chip in that that translates the communication, and they really don't cost all that much.

  • @sicKlown86
    @sicKlown86 Жыл бұрын

    While I don't have any experience with this specific model, I have had to work with similar, albeit slightly smaller, models that were used to control an Hegla crane. This was not all that long ago, so it's a bit of a surprise to see their design language was so consistent for so long.

  • @robertwittjr1198
    @robertwittjr1198 Жыл бұрын

    i wasn't going to comment, but the company logos seemed familiar and piqued my curiosity. 02:56 Rittal is still in business, perhaps they can help identify this. per wikipedia Rittal is a German company headquartered in Herborn. The company manufactures electrical enclosures for use in industrial settings. Founded in 1961, Rittal is a subsidiary of the Friedhelm Loh Group. Allen-Bradley is also still in business; Allen-Bradley is the brand-name of a line of factory automation equipment, today owned by Rockwell Automation. The company manufactures programmable logic controllers (PLC), human-machine interfaces, sensors, safety components and systems, software, drives and drive systems, contactors, motor control centers, and systems of such products. very interesting gizmo, merry christmas.

  • @Jonoth

    @Jonoth

    Жыл бұрын

    I sit in front of a 72" by 36" by 72" Rittal cabinet at work

  • @gilah6565
    @gilah6565 Жыл бұрын

    No wonder about the HDD. Deskstars were notoriously known for their "click of death"

  • @SimonQuigley

    @SimonQuigley

    Жыл бұрын

    Deathstars. It's been 20 years and I still remember the click click click screech.

  • @wetwareinterface3977

    @wetwareinterface3977

    Жыл бұрын

    when he pulled the drive out and I saw IBM my first thought was no wonder it won't boot anymore, then he stated it was a 40GB model and i knew what was coming when he was plugging it in. They were called deathstars for a reason, I bought 3 at once back when they first launched the 20, 30 and 40 Gb models, 2 failed in under a month and the third died 6 months in.

  • @LenweSaralonde

    @LenweSaralonde

    Жыл бұрын

    I had one of these too in the early 2000's (and it died too). This PC was probably still used until the early 2000's until they decided to fully replace it (after the HDD had crashed?)

  • @Jonoth
    @Jonoth Жыл бұрын

    The kic card came in all of the ab computers of that vintage. That serial card is probably for rs-485 or rs-422. Its a base model. There's a couple of different comm cards you could get for it (controlnet or data highway plus/remote io)

  • @petemiller2598

    @petemiller2598

    Жыл бұрын

    Here’s the documentation for the KIC utility in the strange case that someone wants to read it lol: literature.rockwellautomation.com/idc/groups/literature/documents/in/6180-in010_-en-p.pdf

  • @AmySteve2008
    @AmySteve2008 Жыл бұрын

    CNC router interface controller for running CNC jobs. Used to work with these, probably running Windows 3.1, DOS or Linux. Had one so old at one point that ran a very old version of Linux with Bubble RAM. The interface to CNC was usually Serial RS-232. There was not enough bubble RAM for more than a few lines of CNC gcode that it had to drip feed it.

  • @darkwinter6028

    @darkwinter6028

    Жыл бұрын

    That wouldn’t have been Linux - which didn’t come along until late in 1991; and was originally written for a 386. It may have been an early UNIX or some other OS running on a minicomputer and drip-feeding to a NC motion controller. I have in my garage a Shizuoka AN-S knee mill that originally came with a 8080-based CNC, with only a punched-paper-tape reader and a hacked-in serial interface for feeding it G-code from an external PC. I believe that the control in that was based on a S-100 based computer system; but I’m not 100% sure (I sold all the electronics to the other guy who was bidding on the machine - turns out he had an AN-S with the same control and needed the electronics for spare parts; and I just wanted the mill itself to do a conversion to a modern control, which is a project still in progress).

  • @AmySteve2008

    @AmySteve2008

    Жыл бұрын

    @@darkwinter6028 yes would have been UNIX.

  • @Peter_S_

    @Peter_S_

    Жыл бұрын

    @@AmySteve2008 Nope, I was using System V UNIX in 1991 and (1) you would not spend $5000 on an operating system and install it on low performance hardware, (2) UNIX was not used for HMIs, and (3) AB HMIs ran DOS or Windows. I'm commissioning a rather large plant right now and we're using L7 and L8 generation AB PLCs with Rockwell software driven Windows HMIs. Windoze is still a nightmare and to call HMI response sluggish would be disrespectful.... to slugs.

  • @dbranconnier1977

    @dbranconnier1977

    Жыл бұрын

    It might have been running a realtime unix-like OS like QNX?

  • @Peter_S_

    @Peter_S_

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dbranconnier1977 AB runs windows.... even today in almost 2023 they are still 100% windows. This box is an HMI or Human-Machine-Interface, and it's just the dashboard the PLC uses to communicate with people. The actual real-time control is done by another computer called a PLC or Programmable Logic Controller.

  • @markbrown8097
    @markbrown8097 Жыл бұрын

    The manual for this unit is available on the Allen-Bradley (Rockwell Automation) website. Looks like it came with Win95/98 ot NT installed as its operating system. KIC card is the Keypad interface card that is overriden if a keyboard is plugged into the PS2 port according to the manual.

  • @robmcleod2876
    @robmcleod2876 Жыл бұрын

    It's a brave man who shows his thermal pasting technique on camera

  • @GreenAppelPie

    @GreenAppelPie

    Жыл бұрын

    Only a fool is worried about other peoples opinions beyond considering them when warranted

  • @joeconti2396
    @joeconti2396 Жыл бұрын

    That's 100% an HMI. We still have some of these where I work. I had to even revive a 486 to get our PLCs to function again

  • @NielsPaul
    @NielsPaul Жыл бұрын

    Good old IBM Deathstar.

  • @timmooney7528

    @timmooney7528

    Жыл бұрын

    The Dells at the place I worked at shipped with them. If any of them didn't die or get replaced, it was a miracle.

  • @SenileOtaku

    @SenileOtaku

    Жыл бұрын

    @@timmooney7528 IBM Deathstars inside of **Dell** machines? You were cursed twice over there, weren't you.

  • @timmooney7528

    @timmooney7528

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SenileOtaku Optiplex GX110

  • @hartoz
    @hartoz Жыл бұрын

    Control unit for an old CNC milling machine. As far as the HDD, did you plug the parameters into the BIOS under type 47 for the CF Card?

  • @dosdude1
    @dosdude1 Жыл бұрын

    I'm almost certain reprogramming that CF card would get it working properly, as I found out and made a video showing recently: kzread.info/dash/bejne/ga2WzMuiYtTUqLA.html That particular SanDisk one that you're using most likely has an SM2236 controller, so will work with the tools described.

  • @andersruke2961
    @andersruke2961 Жыл бұрын

    At first glance I noticed the name Rittal on the front. Its a Swedish manufacturer of industrial enclosures and racks. So to me it looks like it was ment for rackmount and that perhaps the entire case was a standard product from Rittal back in the day. The Rittal company is still around and I pass by their facilities on a regular basis. Merry Christmas from Sweden.

  • @elogy890
    @elogy890 Жыл бұрын

    Rittal makes industrial enclosures and cabinets for electrics and all sorts of stuff, so my guess would be that this thing was some sort of interface for a machine that was contained (partly) within one of those cabinets.

  • @jothain

    @jothain

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes it's very obvious that it's "cabinet pc". Most likely it has resided on PLC cabinet and allowed programmers to more easily do changes to their factory programs.

  • @kurtpena5462

    @kurtpena5462

    Жыл бұрын

    It was likely an HMI for a CNC mill or tooling center.

  • @jothain

    @jothain

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kurtpena5462 I was about to mention the same, but interface is missing Jog-dial which has been on all CNC machines I've seen in addition to few other g-code related buttons.

  • @Chriva
    @Chriva Жыл бұрын

    It could be the size limit thing at play here. P1 and older system tend not to work with drives larger than 7.8 gigs without major trickery to the partition table. Basically: Configure it as a much smaller drive by manual config in the bios, install a loader that overrides the internal bios routines in charge of hdd access and then install an os on top of that. Took me days to do it to my old p1 but it's now happily running w98 on a 200 gig drive

  • @timballam3675

    @timballam3675

    Жыл бұрын

    Disk type 17 was the normal option I seam to remember with something like ezdrive installed.

  • @EverythingIsBrokenGarage
    @EverythingIsBrokenGarage Жыл бұрын

    Allen Bradley sounds like the names of Scrooge's slient business partners in the 1840s England haha

  • @timmooney7528

    @timmooney7528

    Жыл бұрын

    Alan Bradley was one of Flynn's buddies. He is the programmer of Tron.

  • @JaredConnell

    @JaredConnell

    Жыл бұрын

    Sounds like a knockoff board game

  • @eg1885

    @eg1885

    Жыл бұрын

    Allen Bradley made the controls for Rockwell Automation's retro encabulator.

  • @Francois_L_7933
    @Francois_L_7933 Жыл бұрын

    Industrial machines are usually well designed and fairly easy to service. Though, from my days buying used industrial stuff, nothing that comes out of these places is even moderately clean.

  • @JeffreyPiatt
    @JeffreyPiatt Жыл бұрын

    I have only worked rides with newer AB PC based control interfaces. The newer gen ones are basically Tablet PC's . the Amusement Park I worked for had ones running XP Embedded. The one linked to the log flume was basically just a normal weather proof PC running monetering software for the block sensors.

  • @monkeyman767
    @monkeyman767 Жыл бұрын

    13:55 quite possible the first time we've seen an uncensored thermal compound application.

  • @SenileOtaku

    @SenileOtaku

    Жыл бұрын

    Seriously. I mean applying it in an "X" shape? Everyone knows it should be applied in the shape of a Hiragana "Ki"...

  • @InkSpot101
    @InkSpot101 Жыл бұрын

    Im pretty sure that's HMI for industrial equipment and made to fit to a door of a control cabinet. We have something similar at my workplace but with modern internals and toutch screen to have commandline access to the PLC's

  • @LakotaNativedoll
    @LakotaNativedoll Жыл бұрын

    fun fact! that old server fan can be used to make an air purifier/fume hood using a box, a 12v wall wart, and either paper towel or cheap air purifier filters! extremely useful for containing dust and paint overspray when restoring old computers like these. i have two of them myself that i use for preventing and treating asthma attacks, along with preventing dust and fumes from being spread while soldering & cleaning out my pc

  • @thoraldshib4393
    @thoraldshib4393 Жыл бұрын

    id say that unit is more a 2004 vintage, its in a ATX format case and is using a ATX powersupply, remember that industrial computers are normally a decade or so behind in technology as they normally just control simple PLC's, also thanks for having Skit Sean today, missed him,

  • @mcmudkipp

    @mcmudkipp

    Жыл бұрын

    It would also make sense for the 40 gig hdd. It seemed rather large to me for a 90s system.

  • @SenileOtaku

    @SenileOtaku

    Жыл бұрын

    It's like when we first got the HMCs (hardware management console) in for our pSeries Regatta machines, and I saw they had 40G drives (late 2001). I wondered why they had such large drives for a hardware controller, until I saw it would contain firmware updates as well as configuration backups.

  • @derek20la

    @derek20la

    Жыл бұрын

    16:46 The BIOS is from 1992

  • @resneptacle

    @resneptacle

    Жыл бұрын

    @@derek20la Still not unsurprising to see new old stock built into industrial machines that is years of not decades older than the built date of the machine.

  • @resneptacle

    @resneptacle

    Жыл бұрын

    Also looked like the fan had four wires for power, tacho and PWM, which I heavily doubt is P1-era old

  • @JamesHalfHorse
    @JamesHalfHorse Жыл бұрын

    Seen a few of these in Mills and one plant that literally made rust (extracted it from steel cleaning acids) for floppy disks and tape and what not... was the 90s and that stuff got into everything. Add humidity the computers would literally rot from the inside out once a filter failed. Worked on a mill here not long ago that was running off a P100 tower with 6 com ports shoved in it that talked with all the sensors.

  • @jesdadotcom
    @jesdadotcom Жыл бұрын

    I appreciate that you dig into equipment sight unseen so we can enjoy figuring it out alongside you.

  • @MyChannel-vm6dw
    @MyChannel-vm6dw11 ай бұрын

    I just found your channel. INSTANTLY subbed. There are not enough people like you exploring, remembering, and restoring older interesting tech. Keep up the great work! It's very much appreciated.

  • @enes_karaca
    @enes_karaca Жыл бұрын

    @ActionRetro That crunch could the M and Z membranes on the keyboard moving. They are on correct place at the start of the video but shifted a bit after reassembly.

  • @megan_alnico
    @megan_alnico Жыл бұрын

    How big were the hard drives that you were trying to use? I have a motherboard that won't accept anything larger than 16 GB. It's possible someone threw that 41 GB drive in there trying to fix it and ran into the same issue you did. Maybe try an 8 GB SD card?

  • @bunter6

    @bunter6

    Жыл бұрын

    I was going to say the same thing, I bet that deskstar is jumpered for 2 or 8GB operation as the PIIX 3 southbridge on a 430HX can't handle anything bigger.

  • @JaredConnell

    @JaredConnell

    Жыл бұрын

    He said fat formatted so i assume he meant fat 16, which would be 4 gb max

  • @megan_alnico

    @megan_alnico

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bunter6 Oooo good point about the jumper. I had forgotten that used to be a thing. That and I found that the SD to IDE converters tend to be more compatible than the compact flash to IDE converters. You'd think mapping the IDE pins directly to an IDE device would be the most compatible but I've had all kinds of incompatibilities. Now I almost exclusively use SD to IDE converters.

  • @megan_alnico

    @megan_alnico

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JaredConnell formatting is one thing but there are some BIOSs from this era they won't recognize drives larger than a certain capacity. I have a board with an SIS chipset that exhibits the same behavior of not recognizing the drive on boot. It only works when I use a smaller SD card.

  • @bunter6

    @bunter6

    Жыл бұрын

    @@megan_alnico yeah I have a Compaq Deskpro 590 which uses Compaq's own triflex chipset and it refuses to work with my SD to IDE boards. I use an Adaptec 1200a PCI card for it instead.

  • @ShoelessJP
    @ShoelessJP Жыл бұрын

    We need a part two for this. What a strange machine, I dig it.

  • @DanaDoesStuff
    @DanaDoesStuff Жыл бұрын

    “And today, we’re going to dive DEEP into just what the heck is wrong with me.“ …I was expecting a much longer video! 🤣

  • @jonathongraves2976
    @jonathongraves2976 Жыл бұрын

    Allen-Bradley is the brand-name of a line of factory automation equipment. They are owned by Rockwell Automation. They manufacture a lot of Automation Equipment. That is a HMI Human Machine Interface Terminal system. It's a panel mounted system. That's why you don't see a back casing like other consumer computers. It's intended to sit in some kind of panel rack, kind of like a server rack but a little different. A Human Machine Interface, or HMI for short, is a device that allows a human to give directions and receive feedback from the PLC that is controlling the manufacturing process. In other words, it is a means to input commands into your machines and earn feedback about their status. Also the HMI software those run is Allen Bradley FactoryTalk View Suite. So to clear things up of what that is, and what Allen-Bradley is. That's basically what it is in a nutshell.

  • @thedungeondelver
    @thedungeondelver Жыл бұрын

    It's the control panel for a Turbo-Encabulator. The case is made from malleable prefamulated amulite.

  • @David-gr8rh
    @David-gr8rh Жыл бұрын

    Happy new year thank you for another year of great videos and more to come.

  • @tommythetoe
    @tommythetoe Жыл бұрын

    I found a bunch of busted computers in the scrap metal bin where I work. I took them to my shop and got out any ssds I found. Got 2 samsung 850 evo 250 GB a WD 500 GB green drive and an Adata 250 GB ssd I had never heard of before I gave that plus the ram and cpus to a friend of mine. The drives were all fine looked brand new. The ram sticks were 4 GB PC3L and the cpus were I5s.

  • @coreykirkpatrick4392
    @coreykirkpatrick4392 Жыл бұрын

    This model IBM Deskstar (along with the 60GB version) was known as the notorious Deathstar drives, that would die with the click of death well before they should have (within 1-2 years).

  • @greggv8

    @greggv8

    Жыл бұрын

    I had a pair of 15 gig Deathstar drives. One just up and died. The other one would pass every test I threw at it 100%. I could install Windows and it would go through that without any problems. But try to *boot and use* Windows from it, it would crash in 2 to 5 minutes unless I had a fan blowing air over the drive. How it could pass an intense, hard driving test suite perfectly yet die merely booting up Windows, which should not have stressed it as much as the testing - which is designed to bring out all kinds of fails, including ones caused by heat, I have no idea. I gave the drive away, making sure to inform the new owner about its issues, and to not put any irreplaceable data on it.

  • @FlameRat_YehLon

    @FlameRat_YehLon

    Жыл бұрын

    So... Whoever decided that it's a good idea to put that in a industrial machine and, judging from its size, use it to do data collection, is a real genius? /s

  • @musgawp
    @musgawp Жыл бұрын

    Merry Christmas and thanks for all the brilliant entertainment.

  • @Trylen
    @Trylen Жыл бұрын

    This looks a lot like the control for one of the Large Paper Cutters we use at our print factory.

  • @msthalamus2172
    @msthalamus2172 Жыл бұрын

    Did you find any dates anywhere inside the machine? The 100MHz Pentium could be a red herring when determining its age. Industrial and embedded systems often use older CPUs because they're adequate to the job and time tested. Even today there are industrial boards (PC/104 form factor) that use modern spins on 486s! So the HDD might be a better indication of from when the system dates than the CPU. I had some IBM Deskstars about that size in the early 2000s, for example. Terribly unreliable things! :) Also, I don't know what system you used to create the partitions on the CF cards and other HDDs you tried, but partition offsets are different now than they used to be. If this machine were on my desk, my next step would be to get a working floppy in there, boot to DOS, and re-fdisk the smallest HDD you have, starting with 2GB (max FAT16) partitions. If that doesn't work, I'd assume there was a problem with the hardware. How do the capacitors look? Best of luck getting this up and running! :)

  • @southernflatland

    @southernflatland

    Жыл бұрын

    Amateur, 4GB is the max FAT16 partition, at least in the Windows NT and newer world. But that comes with a compromise that it's no longer MS-DOS compatible. Oddly enough I learned these things while modifying my PSP. I found the absolute fastest memory cards for PSP at the time were 4GB, formatted to FAT16, and using the FAT driver file from firmware version 3.71. Yes it's doable. Try it. Get a 4GB memory card, pop it into Windows, and it should offer you the option to format as FAT16, though it'll come with a warning that it's not MS-DOS compatible. The catch is that the cluster size is 64KB, while MS-DOS only supported a max of 32KB cluster size. Honestly, with the amount of experience I have with the FAT file system, I could probably manage to convince that thing to run Windows 2000 or even perhaps a patched MicroXP.

  • @msthalamus2172

    @msthalamus2172

    Жыл бұрын

    I was only trying to help, and I was referring to specifically to DOS, which does have a 2GB limit. There's no need for name calling.

  • @channelite
    @channelite Жыл бұрын

    Hope to see part 2 soon!

  • @AlejandroRodolfoMendez
    @AlejandroRodolfoMendez Жыл бұрын

    Interesting machine whatever it is from. Good luck making it work. Merry Christmas

  • @DeathRyder33
    @DeathRyder33 Жыл бұрын

    i used to work in a factory that had these, one controlled a round table with bars straight up, u load parts on it like large rings to get coated. the guy took 30 minutes to program it by hand, entering decimals, for the turn table, robotic arms that moved up and down, for some black coating that req heat to dry quickly.

  • @RudysRetroIntel
    @RudysRetroIntel Жыл бұрын

    Amazing machine! Thanks for sharing

  • @horusfalcon
    @horusfalcon Жыл бұрын

    That machine looks to be mounted in a cabinet door made by Rittal (a nice German company). There may be a clue somewhere as to what the original enclosure looked like. What a find for 50 bucks! (You are probably going to want to boot to one or another version of MS-DOS or PC-DOS, or, maybe, Windows NT 3.51 or 4.0, or Windows 2000 Pro, depending on what model this machine is.) That "oddball" card may be a Sutherland-Schultz communication card for supporting Data Highway + (DH+) communication (an A-B proprietary comms standard).

  • @LotoTheHero
    @LotoTheHero Жыл бұрын

    I love this massive monster! I really hope you're able to get it up and running! Then maybe we'll be able to answer the age old question "Can it run DOOM ?".

  • @negirno

    @negirno

    Жыл бұрын

    It's a Pentium 100 with maybe at least 16 megs of RAM, so it should run Quake, too. Will it work with that custom video board? That's another question...

  • @magmaxt

    @magmaxt

    Жыл бұрын

    Of course,but the problem I think is the motherboard can accept diferent GPUs,for me the best solution is use another Socket 7 motherboard or upgrade to a newer platform like s370 or Super 7

  • @TimePilot2084
    @TimePilot2084 Жыл бұрын

    Entertaining. I always end up finishing a night with some retro tech after exploring less... wholesome corners of the Internet. It helps keep the nightmares at bay. Last night I watched all the "Max Headroom Incident" (broadcast TV hijack) videos I could find.

  • @scottharvey-davies1607
    @scottharvey-davies1607 Жыл бұрын

    Happy Christmas buddy. Thanks for the content. Wishing you and yours all the very best for the next year..... now back to my Baulders gate 2 adventure on my hackinghosh core2 acer laptop..... ;)

  • @jamtea388
    @jamtea388 Жыл бұрын

    Looking forward to part 2

  • @Roaether
    @Roaether Жыл бұрын

    Never seen this exact model of computer, but at my last job (I am an engineer) the shop had dozens of lathes and endmills, a lot of older ones that would have similar interface computers like this. they were all in ones just like this with a built in screen, keypad (some membrane ones like that and others with real keys) and many would have there own inputs for controlling the machine itself. They all had a lot of similar features to this one (such as the shock absorbers on the HDD). Old as hell but they still work great and were still used daily for making parts in the shop. They were still the main work-horses of the shop for most parts XD

  • @tomsparks3259
    @tomsparks3259 Жыл бұрын

    Used to use interfaces like this every day. It's just a computer. But oriented toward interfacing with PLC. All the control logic, I/O hardware, and A/D stuff is in the cabinets scattered about the industrial plant. This computer would've just had the pictographic software a to monitor processes and control things manually. The system can work without this thing as in the case where it conks out and gets swapped out. With the right software, you could make a killer, industrial-strength home automation interface. Our place used Wonderware for the interfaces.

  • @phydeux
    @phydeux Жыл бұрын

    Used to work in a chemical plant that used these. It was often simpler than dealing with Allen-Bradley's "data highway" interface cards and having to find places to put PCs where they weren't in the way or their cables weren't at risk of damage. And yes, you'd mount it inside a industrial controls cabinet. Similar in concept to a server rack, but far more durable and protective. It provided you controls for working with PLC systems but also could talk to your PC network to send reports, alarms, and even allow remote control from other PCs. This way, a manager could babysit idle systems without getting their hands dirty. Or security guards could monitor safety stats during the night.

  • @frozendude707
    @frozendude707 Жыл бұрын

    16:10 looks like it has ATA security turned on, if that is the case it will only recognise harddrives with the same key in the hdd firmware and the superIO chip, and likewise for the hdd itself, there are tools to help with that but nearly all AV companies like to pad their numbers of hits by deleting such tools when found, so make sure to prepare it on a computer without any AV at all, including microsoft defender that normally cannot be turned off.

  • @Ragnar8504

    @Ragnar8504

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh, that's an interesting point!

  • @sonyericssoner
    @sonyericssoner Жыл бұрын

    You are crazy in a wery good way. Keep us smiling!

  • @trevgauntletneu_gaming
    @trevgauntletneu_gaming Жыл бұрын

    Neat, an Allen-Bradley HMI. I work on them everyday! Recently, my job is undergoing hardware upgrades.

  • @trevormurphy7041
    @trevormurphy7041 Жыл бұрын

    Soon as I saw it I was thinking of what you could do with it about halfway through your video I got the idea get some vintage stereo equipment and make a nice custom coffee table with that computer and some vintage stereo equipment would be cool to put a TV tuner card in it great find keep up the good work

  • @chouseification
    @chouseification Жыл бұрын

    We had a similar one back in the day - not same model but same idea, as the main control panel on a Lawrence Mega tortilla press line. The operator had touch screen access to the main functions of the line on this screen. Ours connected to a bunch of Allen-Bradly ladder logic PLC hardware actually controlling the discrete sections. Every now and then, I had to show the maintenance guys how to correct for a divide by zero error... that was a really nasty one, as it would halt the line completely and you couldn't get into the menus until that fault was corrected. Our fix was to connect with a laptop via serial cable and update one of the registers to a positive int - the instant you applied that change, the control panel came right back to life...

  • @scamperly
    @scamperly Жыл бұрын

    My brother (Canadian Computer Collector) told me about your channel and ngl I'm loving it!

  • @ActionRetro

    @ActionRetro

    Жыл бұрын

    What's it like having a celebrity brother?!

  • @PilotUlli
    @PilotUlli Жыл бұрын

    Nice! Please show us more industrial computers! 😀👍

  • @roseproctor3177
    @roseproctor3177 Жыл бұрын

    Ive seen those, and often install modern versions of them at work! I build electrical control panels. Thats a super old-school HMI! Ive actually seen a couple of those now at work. It's designed to be the programmable interface to control the panel's functions and operate equipment

  • @redfonzie21
    @redfonzie21 Жыл бұрын

    I'm REALLY looking forward to Part 2!!! I'd love to have some kind of old bit like this, and put something like a NUC in it, have all the audio, video, and other I/O put out to the case panels... have like a 24" gaming monitor inside a bolt-on or hardware mountable industrial frame with it. Yeah, I'm kinda weird into this stuff. But hey, I still was really interested in this. I hope it goes well.

  • @verstrahlt1907
    @verstrahlt1907 Жыл бұрын

    nice video and an Interesting computer; I hope, it will work in future, and that you find a place for it [ I suggest: a wall (but do not forget the cooling) ]

  • @scottthomas3792
    @scottthomas3792 Жыл бұрын

    Reminds me of the computer in the laundry room at my last job. We added a outside filter over the fan - in addition to the filter it came with-to catch all the air crud. Made me wonder what the people who worked there were breathing in.

  • @JamesnLollify
    @JamesnLollify Жыл бұрын

    Incredible, honestly quite

  • @dd07871
    @dd07871 Жыл бұрын

    Max your soldering iron should be set to for general purpose soldering with standard 60/40 solder is 700 F/370 C.

  • @ulfkonig
    @ulfkonig Жыл бұрын

    I don't know anything about these machines but I do love 90s industrial.

  • @RetroBitTech
    @RetroBitTech Жыл бұрын

    Nice. The CNC i worked on had one of these.

  • @johnstewart7059
    @johnstewart7059 Жыл бұрын

    You will get more out of it with a PLC5 from AB, or an SLC 100 or 500. We had the portable version that had an amber CRT. And JIC, AB stands for awesome bucks. You would run a graphic interface networked to a PLC rack running a logic program, either ladder or function blocks. Great in industrial settings.

  • @enxtech3716
    @enxtech3716 Жыл бұрын

    Removable CFL backlight? That's begging for an easy LED backlight retrofit! If that's not cursed enough, you could even use RGBW LED strips to make the screen go funky colours as well as normal white...

  • @ActionRetro

    @ActionRetro

    Жыл бұрын

    holy crap that's genius

  • @Michael-Archonaeus

    @Michael-Archonaeus

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ActionRetro YES; DO IT!

  • @capybara5494
    @capybara54948 ай бұрын

    That intro hit hard 😂

  • @autobotjazz1972
    @autobotjazz1972 Жыл бұрын

    Nice piece of industrial hardware, definitely built for the environment it was expected to operate in.

  • @brendanhoffmann8402
    @brendanhoffmann8402 Жыл бұрын

    This is like a scaled up version of the device I used when I was doing electrical testing and tagging... It had a basic database in it that was synced to a windows pc but you'd add data like whether or not it passed electrical safety with the device running a check on continuity on the device you plugged it into.

  • @DolezalPetr
    @DolezalPetr Жыл бұрын

    part 2 is going to be interesting

  • @retroatx
    @retroatx Жыл бұрын

    Wow I hadn't thought about AB in years. Late eighties I used an AB MC68000 based machine that ran microware OS-9 (OS-K)

  • @drCox12
    @drCox12 Жыл бұрын

    Looks like it's from an industrial electric cabinet (Rittal lock). The amount of dust is not unusual in a production environment, we're talking about complex production machines that run 24/7 for at least 5 days a week over many, many years. In the company where I work we don't even shut down the machines for weekends or holidays but only clean them - power stays on in order to avoid electronic quirks as soon as you would cold start the production machines again. But the use of a mechanical hard drive is unusual. Normally you would opt for flash memory due to its higher tolerance against heat, shocks and mechanical wear. This was also standard in the 1990s, long before Pentium CPUs were released.

  • @NightWolfx03
    @NightWolfx03 Жыл бұрын

    Yeah I have scrapped a few HMI's that were damaged and got some really neat parts out of them. Including a slew of 386 motherboards.

  • @phantomyoda
    @phantomyoda Жыл бұрын

    Most of these pcs (some still in use where I work) are attached to and come with multi-million dollar tools used for or in production. Tool manufacturers would integrate the PCs into the tool so you had to buy a whole new tool to upgrade the PC. That's why a lot of manufacturing plants still have systems from the 90s or early 2000s in use

  • @mbrit
    @mbrit Жыл бұрын

    I love this more than I can say. It's like it's from space.

  • @FlameRat_YehLon

    @FlameRat_YehLon

    Жыл бұрын

    I think it's common in factory in the past, and in fact some of them is probably still in use nowadays (because why not). That's said, nowadays pretty much everything use touch screen instead, unless when you can't touch it, in which case people just plug in a mouse and use on screen keyboard.

  • @nicolafiorelli1319
    @nicolafiorelli1319 Жыл бұрын

    LOL @ “percussive” maintenance. I use that method religiously in many situations

  • @hyperturbotechnomike
    @hyperturbotechnomike Жыл бұрын

    I do sometimes repair those, mostly Siemens Simatic panel and embedded PC's

  • @therealjammit
    @therealjammit Жыл бұрын

    I don't want to sound like "one of those guys" but you might want to use the "fdisk -l"command under Linux to see if the drive even works or what format the drive has. Edit: When drives first started getting bigger than 2gig, IBM came out with a line of hard drives that could be configured to force the drive electronics to "pretend" it was only 2 gig. Basically if it was a 20 gig drive the 2 gig jumper would waste 18 gigs of drive space. This was for backwards compatibility on industrial machines like this that the custom software was still in 16 bit mode. It was cheaper to waste the drive space than it was to re-tool the entire shop to use 32 bit software.

  • @josephpalmer5997
    @josephpalmer5997 Жыл бұрын

    My curiosity is with that panel and stuff still work if swapped out the motherboard with something more from the home user market. Would be really interesting to get that working with hardware homeusers could insert. Maybe make that in a wall-mounted gaming machine that could do a lot. Maybe see if you can get something from the early XP-Era working too and load it up with some high end components and see if you can play Crysis on that display.

  • @maurvir3197
    @maurvir3197 Жыл бұрын

    Ah, you got bitten by the famous IBM "deathstar" hard disk. Those things were notorious for that in the day, so I'm surprised to see one in an industrial machine.

  • @osgeld
    @osgeld Жыл бұрын

    what I find when I worked around machines of that vintage still in use at a factory, the hard drive would die, a machine tech would grab whatever drive they could find, make a 2gb partition, copy whatever the 1 program is, and boot it from the floppy, problem solved

  • @steves-gaming-uk8977
    @steves-gaming-uk8977 Жыл бұрын

    This looks the same as we had in the factory back in the day on our CNC machines

  • @TylerFurrison
    @TylerFurrison Жыл бұрын

    Don't need maintenence if you don't have a filter..

  • @ps5hasnogames55

    @ps5hasnogames55

    Жыл бұрын

    furry ☹

  • @CRYPTiCEXiLE
    @CRYPTiCEXiLE Жыл бұрын

    like your thinkpad .... i got a T470 and its awesome i upgrade it to 16gb and put in a new crucial 500gb nvme disk in there as well.. great video interestng pc.

  • @pizzalord3n
    @pizzalord3n Жыл бұрын

    We used to have old HMI's loaded with Movex ERP for inputting shipping data and print labels. Same cruddy membrane keyboard, had a trackball as well though. Strange things.

  • @paulyearley1084
    @paulyearley1084 Жыл бұрын

    I fkn LOVE that you busted out 80s KMFDM

  • @ActionRetro

    @ActionRetro

    Жыл бұрын

    hell yeah!

  • @WaschBaer__
    @WaschBaer__ Жыл бұрын

    already saw it in the comments, but was about to say, that his is a machine attatched to cnc machines, seen plenty of those layout etc and similar devices used for cnc

  • @marianaldenhoevel7240
    @marianaldenhoevel7240 Жыл бұрын

    "What makes it tick?" That thing never ticked. It only ever very seriously tocked.

  • @MikeFromDownUnder
    @MikeFromDownUnder Жыл бұрын

    What a beast!

  • @Astinsan
    @Astinsan Жыл бұрын

    1:08 cut aways are getting better

  • @daspec
    @daspec Жыл бұрын

    Get an IDE DOM (disk on module) of 512MB formatted from MS-DOS 6.22 and it will probably work fine. Also you may need to use XT-IDE in a card or EPROM on a NIC to bypass any drive / BIOS limitations, although its unlikely that a Pentium of that era had any problems booting a large drive, b ut you never know. We need parts 2 and 3 for this, with full restoration , thorough cleaning inside-out, retrobright and new touch screen cover! Many print shops have thick transparrent films they can print with all the labels over the keyboard membrane and replace the damaged one.

  • @Ragnar8504

    @Ragnar8504

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't think there's anything to retrobright here, it's pretty much all metal, probably powercoated.

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