[Coco] Bio
Vern Burke
vburke at skow.net
Tue Oct 14 17:04:01 EDT 2003
David:
Yup, we had two antique Panasonic chip shooters and and a slightly odd
pick and place that I don't remember the brand of at the moment. The
original
controller for the 722 was a Radio Shack Model 100 actually built into the
console. The machine was less than spectacullarly accurate, hard for the
average schmoe operator to use, and stank for profile storage.
During our annual 2 week summer maintenance shutdown, I yanked the 100
and wrote a whole new control program for a CC 3. It had temperature bar
graphs
for all 7 zones with easy go/no go indicators (the bar turned green when the
zone temp
was correct and red when it was out of spec).
Vern
----- Original Message -----
From: "David Hazelton" <davehazelton at access-4-free.com>
To: <coco at maltedmedia.com>
Sent: Tuesday, October 14, 2003 4:29 PM
Subject: Re: [Coco] Bio
> Vern Burke wrote:
>
> >
> > Currently have 3 CoCo 3's, one equipped with Cloud9's excellent
> > SCSI controller and a pair of Syquest 1.5GB removable cartridge
> > drives and OS9.
> >
> > My claim to "fame" :) is having written a GUI application to control a
> > Vitronics 722 infrared reflow oven with a CC3 and OS9.
> >
> ...
> >
> > Vern
> >
> >
> Is the Vitronics 722 infrared reflow oven an oven at the end of a
> surface mount line, such as a Fuji line or a Mydata line? When I worked
> at Sanmina, I became the Fuji "expert", because the Controllers were VME
> 68030 based computers running OS-9 2.4 and no one even knew what OS9
> was. We had 3 at Manchester, NH with one running WNN(?) web-server that
> I pulled off from RTSI archive. I could not get the SAMBA clients to
> work on them though. (It was production so crashes were lokked upon
> badly! )
>
> ~David Hazelton
>
>
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