The testing that I've been doing so far to get the 6045 hard drive working on 
my Nova 3 suggests that the interface card receives commands over the IO 
channel (i.e., I can command seeks and get the expected clunking sounds from 
the drive). But the interface card does not appear to be responding back to the 
CPU so far, since attempts to read the three IO registers or the busy/done 
flags always return zeros. So, I'll need to move on to component-level 
debugging of the interface card now.

I'll need to have access to the interface card, of course. The first step was 
to swap the positions of my Nova rack and my VAX-11/730 to get the right side 
of the Nova away from the wall. This wasn't easy in the tiny, cluttered room 
that they live in.

Next, I lowered the Nova 2 rack units, because it was in the top rack position 
and I couldn't get access to all of the top cover screws to get the top cover 
off. Damn, that thing is heavy! I pressed my hydraulic lift hand truck into 
service. There was a 2U filler panel under the Nova that can now live at the 
top of the rack, so there will be no need to raise the Nova back up later.

With the top of the Nova accessible, I removed the quad serial mux in slot 12 
to expose the component side of the disk interface card in slot 11. There are 6 
empty slots under the interface card, so I have good access to both sides of 
the interface card, as well as the backplane.

Now I should be able to do things such as running a tight loop reading or 
writing a controller card register while I probe the logic. Should be simple, 
right? Well, it would be if I had a schematic diagram of the interface card. 
So, I'm doing this in hard mode. I decided to do a little preliminary trace 
identification on the card before going to bed tonight, and that's when I 
discovered that this game is in very hard mode: Most of the ICs on the 
controller card are marked with a DG logo and an 8000-series number, and I have 
no documentation about those chips yet. The busy/done flags come out of a DG 
8109, but what the heck is that? I hope that they'll end up being rebadged 7400 
series chips or something like that so I'll have some chance of finding 
replacements, but I'll need to figure out how to identify these DG chips before 
I can make much progress debugging the card.

I've been looking through the documentation that I have, as well as looking in 
documents on Bitsavers for DG gear other than the Nova 3 in hopes of finding 
anything identifying these 8000-series chips. I haven't found the decoder key 
so far. If anybody out there in cctalk land knows about DG-marked 8000-series 
logic chips, I would appreciate any help very much!


-- 
Mark J. Blair, NF6X <[email protected]>
http://www.nf6x.net/

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