A long time ago, I had the incomplete remnants of an oddball terminal which I 
retrieved from a junk pile at a small, obscure school in Pasadena. I'll try to 
describe it as best I can, based on old memory. I could have sworn that it had 
a dataplate label identifying it as a DEC VT02, but that could be way off the 
mark.

It was built around a Tektronix vector storage display, oriented in portrait 
mode. It had quite a bit of screen burn from its long life displaying text. I 
don't recall the model number of the display, but I might recognize one if I 
saw it. It was quite long, making the whole terminal quite long. It had X, Y 
and Z BNC inputs, and it had a neat test mode that drew a spiral on the screen.

The display sat on top of a long chassis with a keyboard at one end, a small 
Flip Chip backplane around the middle, and a power supply (probably linear, 
IIRC) at the rear end. I don't think that the Flip Chip boards were still in it 
when I got it, but it came along with a small box of spare Flip Chips.

After setting the big Tektronix display on top of the lower chassis, there was 
a long U-shaped sheet metal cover that sat over the top and covered the 
display, making it look somewhat like a single device rather than a stack of 
two things. The lower chassis and the top cover were painted approximately 
white as I recall.

I never did anything interesting with the display other than occasionally 
driving it with signal generators, and I got rid of the whole pile a long, long 
time ago.

Does that old beast sound remotely familiar to anybody here? How hard should I 
kick myself for not keeping it?

-- 
Mark J. Blair, NF6X <n...@nf6x.net>
http://www.nf6x.net/

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