I posted this originally on the ArmyRadios mailing list, but I think it's just 
computery enough that it may be of interest here, too. And maybe somebody here 
even has the answers to my questions!

I just got an AN/UGC-144 communications terminal. It looks unused, and it came 
with cables and  manuals (-12 and -30, but not including schematic diagrams or 
component-level details). It powers up, but fails to boot from its internal 
hard drive. The screen has some bad rows and columns, and the gas spring that 
supports the display needs to be replaced. I shared a bunch of pictures on 
Twitter today as I unpacked it and started playing with it, in this thread:

https://twitter.com/nf6x/status/980174491673178112

Here are direct links to some of the more interesting pictures in that long 
thread:

https://twitter.com/nf6x/status/980198067767947264
https://twitter.com/nf6x/status/980202029766230016
https://twitter.com/nf6x/status/980263764325941249
https://twitter.com/nf6x/status/980302909165338624

I haven't found very much about the terminal online yet, and I expect that I 
have a long road ahead of me as I try to fix the display and see if anything 
can be recovered from the hard drive. If the original software isn't present on 
the hard drive and recoverable, then this may be a great big doorstop! But it 
may also be a fun reverse-engineering project. I haven't dug into it deeply 
enough yet to determine whether it's built around an embedded PC-clone 
architecture or is something completely custom. In any case, I'll naturally 
want to try to dump and disassemble any ROMs I find inside of it. The CAGE code 
is for Sypris Electronics, and the boot screen shows a Honeywell copyright 
notice. I found that it tried to access a blank floppy diskette at boot time in 
the right drive, but I didn't have an MS-DOS boot diskette handy at the moment 
to see if it could boot from it. I'll give that a try when I have a chance... 
but probably after Easter.

Have any software diskettes, programs, disk images, etc. for this terminal made 
it out into the wild? I presume that there were boot and installation diskettes 
that were used for hard drive formatting and software installation, and I would 
really love to get my hands on anything like that... especially if it turns out 
the the hard drive in my terminal is blank and/or dead. I'll be satisfied if I 
can use this rig as a dumb terminal for RTTY use, and even happier if I can do 
anything fancier with it.

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

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