On 11/25/2015 01:34 AM, Robert Jarratt wrote:

-----Original Message-----
From: cctalk [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jon Elson
Sent: 25 November 2015 02:05
To: [email protected]; [email protected]:On-Topic and Off-
Topic Posts
Subject: Re: Replacing MicroVAX II PSU With a Modern PSU

On 11/24/2015 05:52 PM, Mark Wickens wrote:
I haven't looked into this at all and I suspect it's probably quite
tricky indeed. I did look around a while back drew a blank.

I built up a Micro-VAX II system out of boards, backplanes and assorted junk.  I
made my own power supply.  The power supply is actually easy, just +5 and
+12, with a touch of
-12 for serial I/O.

The only tricky thing is the power-OK and reset logic, which really wasn't all
that tricky, either.

I had a power and thermal safety control panel on it repurposed from the
original 3rd party IBM mainframe memory box that would shut it down if there
was an abnormal voltage or cooling failure.

Jon
Thanks Jon. I think standard PC PSUs only do +5 and +12, so how did you do -12?
I did not use PC power supplies, I used a couple industrial power supplies. I built this system in 1986. But, generic PC power supplies DO have a little bit of -12 V for serial cards. The standard PCI connector
has a -12 V pin.  PCIe seems to have dropped the -12V supply.
For P OK and DC OK I found this: 
http://home.windstream.net/engdahl/powerup_reset_circuit.htm, but just for test 
purposes I assume I could connect the +5 direct to P OK and DC OK.
BPOK needs to pulse low after power is stable, BDCOK should be high when power is OK. Or, at least, that's what I got from the drawing you linked to.

Jon

Reply via email to