PDP8 power supply G8018
Tony Duell
ard at p850ug1.demon.co.uk
Wed Apr 20 18:11:43 CDT 2005
> > To me, the power supply is as much a part of the original design as the
> > CPU, the I/O boards, the peripherals, etc. If you don't care about
> > keeping the hardware as original as possible, then you might as well run
> > an emulator on a PC.
>
> Why is that such a capital crime? I use a modified PC power supply with a
Remember I am a hardware person. The PSU is as much a part of the machine
as anything else. Some PSUs have rather interesting designs, too, which
need to be preserved.
> Commodore 64C, so should I just chuck the whole thing and use a Commodore
> emulator because I'm unworthy of grace due to the fact I didn't like the
> original unreliable 64 brick?
Hmm... IIRC the C64 brick is potted, and almost impossible to repair.
Unlike the C128 brick, which is trivial to open, and not hard to repair
(I've had mine apart).
I think what I'd want to do in that case would be to build a replacement
PSU that followed the design of the Commodore one as closely as
possible, but which was repairable, and used generously-rated components
so it was more reliable. But I would not want to replace the whole thing
with a switcher, which is totally non-original.
-tony
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