On Nov 2, 2018, at 1:22 PM, Electronics Plus <sa...@elecplus.com> wrote:
> 
> Memory
> User-installable RAM boards provide the 425 with RAM in increments of 8, 16

> From 
> http://bitsavers.trailing-edge.com/pdf/hp/9000_400/A2100-90600_HP_9000_425_Owners_Guide_Aug91.pdf
>  
> <http://bitsavers.trailing-edge.com/pdf/hp/9000_400/A2100-90600_HP_9000_425_Owners_Guide_Aug91.pdf>

Yes, I’ve read that, thanks. What I need is the actual *pinout* for the memory 
boards which is the sort of thing that’d be in a hardware reference manual 
rather than a user’s manual. (Along with pinouts for the DIO-II expansion slot.)

> If this is standard ECC memory, then I have plenty of it on hand. But HP was 
> known to use some really funky looking memory.

They use standard *memory* on non-standard *boards*.

The ICs are standard, for example in 
<https://www.hpmuseum.net/display_item.php?hw=863 
<https://www.hpmuseum.net/display_item.php?hw=863>> a 4MB board uses nine 80ns 
514256 ICs and a trio of 74AS1004 hex inverter-drivers. However, the boards are 
not SIMMs, they use a 72-pin header.

My theory is that given they used the same ICs as everyone else, it should be 
easy to design and fabricate a SIMM adapter from the board pinout.

This RAM also appears to have been used in the HP-9000/375 and /380, in case 
someone has a hardware reference manual for those.

  -- Chris

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