23489 1MAR95-2114 General Information Tandy102 From: KEJACKSON To: ALL Hi, all. I just bought a tandy 102 at a govt sale. Was wondering if anyone had any info on it. Seems to have 32k ram, expandable to 64k with another chip. It is portable, with the dot matrix screen, has an internal modem, rs-232c, and phone and cassette (remember those?) non-standard plugs (8-pin) on the back. Also, on left side has two switches, 1 with DIR and ACP (currently on ACP) and 1 with ANS and ORIG (for the modem I imagine). I believe it uses a VIC-20, if memory serves. Anyhow, any info about where to get a manual, etc for it. OR, if perhaps, someone used to own one, pls e-mail me. Thanks in advance! - Kev -*- 23490 3MAR95-0310 T1000/1200/3000 RE: tl2 hard disk upgrade (Re: Msg 23 From: TVDOG To: KLUCK (NR) Well, my Dad's old TL is still running, after heavy use, and has never been to the shop (I've taken the keyboard apart a couple times to clean it). Tandy's were some of the most reliable computers made ... but Tandy doesn't make computers any more. What Radio Shack sells now - who knows? I have abused this machine some. I plugged in a hard drive controller with a short in it and left it on till the tech on the phone told me that was a bad sound for the computer to make. I chain-smoke, and no problems there except that the floppy drive needs cleaning more often. Etc. No wires on the bottom of this circuit board. BTW - AMD processor, Sony floppy drive. CM-5 monitor still going strong. Jeff (tvdog) -*- 23492 3MAR95-0337 Printers and Peripherals RE: Tandy 1000 SX (Re: Msg 23470) From: TVDOG To: WESF The light pen was a non-starter. There were two light pens marketed, but nobody bought one, and they are discontinued now. The situation is the same as for the tape cassette drive that was available for the original IBM PC. Nobody bought it, and it soon became known as a useless port. I can dig up the two product numbers if you want them for your trivia file, but you won't find any. The light pen was programmed through the video con- troller. It is not a serial port, though it looks like one. A program would have had to be specially written to use it. No such program exists. Jeff (tvdog) -*- 23493 3MAR95-1850 General Information RE: Tandy102 (Re: Msg 23489) From: TESTRAKE To: KEJACKSON >Hi, all. I just bought a tandy 102 at a govt sale. Was wondering if >anyone had any info on it. Seems to have 32k ram, expandable to 64k with >another chip. It is portable, with the dot matrix screen, has an >internal modem, rs-232c, and phone and cassette (remember those?) >non-standard plugs (8-pin) on the back. Also, on left side has two switches, >1 with DIR and ACP (currently on ACP) and 1 with ANS and ORIG (for the >modem I imagine). I believe it uses a VIC-20, if memory serves. Anyhow, >any info about where to get a manual, etc for it. OR, if perhaps, someone >used to own one, pls e-mail me. Thanks in advance! Well, I *HAD* a manual for a Tandy 100, similar to your 102, but I can't find the blessed thing. Suspect I got rid of it recently when I discarded a bunch of old books. Those machines were still popular with reporters, and other media types long after other computers of their era were replaced. It was considered pretty amazing for a reporter back in the mid-eighties to type out a story, connect to a telephone, and zap the story to the office at 300 bps. The things would hold stuff in mwmory for days with a few AA (I think) batteries. I never owned one, but knew a few people years ago who did. There used to be a few people here on Delphi on the Portable Computer forum who used Tandy 10x machines, (to get there, at a prompt, type go com por). Someone there might be able to give you a hand. -Dick- -*- 23494 3MAR95-2010 General Information RE: Tandy102 (Re: Msg 23493) From: KEJACKSON To: TESTRAKE Great, thanks for the point in the right direction! Yea, it runs off of 4 AA's. I remember seeing the 100 model when I was a Junior in High School. The guy who came to set up our network of Model III's had one. I was amazed. Thanks again! - Kev -*- 23495 3MAR95-2134 General Information trs 80 From: ROFOSTER To: ALL Help! A friend has asked me to ask you if there are modems available for the TRS 80 computer? If so where or from whom and what is the baud rate for the modem? She wants to use it for E-mail. Can someone help? Thanks. Bob Foster or ROFOSTER@DELPHI>COM> -*- 23496 3MAR95-2230 General Information RE: trs 80 (Re: Msg 23495) From: TESTRAKE To: ROFOSTER >Help! A friend has asked me to ask you if there are modems available >for the TRS 80 computer? If so where or from whom and what is the baud >rate for the modem? She wants to use it for E-mail. Can someone help? >Thanks. Bob Foster or ROFOSTER@DELPHI>COM> She would need an external modem which would need to be connected to the TRS 80's serial port. I don't know anything about that computer's serial port, and would expect that a custom cable would need to be made. Any tech type should be able to handle that, but might need the specs for that port. I don't remember the processor speed on that computer ( a few mhz?), and would guess that speeds over 2400mhz (possibly 9600mhz) shouldn't be expected. Of course, a comm program for that computer would be required, and if she does not already have it, may be hard to find. -Dick- -*- 23497 4MAR95-0800 General Information RE: trs 80 (Re: Msg 23495) From: MISAL To: ROFOSTER > A friend has asked me to ask you if there are modems available > for the TRS 80 computer? TRS 80 is a general term for Tandy's early computer line -- but, most of these machine have a standard serial port and will handle any Hayes Compatible 300 to 2400 baud modem. The friend will need a comm program for the machine. These are available but to suggest one, I would need to know which model. Mike MJ-Software << Sent by Scout v.3.1 >> -*- 23498 5MAR95-1935 General Information 4000 SCSI, where is 386enh icon? From: BARTONO To: ALL Hi group. I am running a 4000-386 scsi 80 meg. I never noticed it before but the icon for and mention of the 386enh mode is missing from the control panel. I have a program that will only run in 386enh mode and so far I am stymied. Any suggestions. (It's a voice mail application that I'm trying to install) Thanks in advance for any suggestions. Bart. -*- 23499 6MAR95-0727 General Information RE: 4000 SCSI, where is 386enh icon? (Re: Msg 23498) From: MISAL To: BARTONO > I am running a 4000-386 scsi 80 meg. I never noticed it before > but the icon for and mention of the 386enh mode is missing from the > control panel. If the icon is not visible, you cannot run that system in Enh mode. Mike MJ-Software << Sent by Scout v.3.1 >> -*- 23500 6MAR95-2007 General Information RE: 4000 SCSI, where is 386enh icon? (Re: Msg 23498) From: KEJACKSON To: BARTONO Bart, first off, how many megs RAM you got? The icon might be found in your progman group somewhere. If not, quit windows and run defrag in dos. There might be something wrong with your permanent swap file. But, you won't be able to tell if you're running a perm or temp swap file without the 386Enh Icon. Also, I believe the icon would be there whether you were in enhanced or real mode. I could be wrong, it's been known to happen.... Worst comes to worse, reload windows. Also, was it working before? - Kevin -*- 23501 6MAR95-2009 General Information RE: 4000 SCSI, where is 386enh icon? (Re: Msg 23498) From: KEJACKSON To: BARTONO Hello again. Check in the Main group in your Program Manager for the 386ENH icon. - Kevin -*- 23503 8MAR95-2343 General Information wanted From: PATMCMANUS To: ALL does anyone out there have the vga card for the tandy 1000rl series? and perhaps the external 5.25 high density drive willing to negotiate price `[1;34;42mRainbow V 1.06 for Delphi - Test Drive -*- 23504 9MAR95-1806 General Information rgbi cm-5 monitor???? From: ORKIN To: ALL Yes i have a tandy cm-5 monitor that i bought a couple of years ago and i seem to have lost my manual, i was wondering if anyone can give me the 9 pin diagram,i am trying to convert a sega genesis to work on my cm-5. thanks for any help. -*- 23505 9MAR95-2019 General Information RE: 4000 SCSI, where is 386enh icon? (Re: Msg 23500) From: BARTONO To: KEJACKSON Thanks for the response. The icon was never there. I only noticed it missing when I attempted to load a voice mail program for quicklink11 and a best data 14.4 modem. I have 4 meg. but when I try to load the ace5000 program it stops and says sorry...can only run in 386enh mode. -Bart p.s. don't worry about, I just find a modem that works on what I've got in the shop. -*- 23506 9MAR95-2024 General Information RE: 4000 SCSI, where is 386enh icon? (Re: Msg 23501) From: BARTONO To: KEJACKSON I looked there first. No icon and no mention of 386enh or enhance memory in there. It read...fonts, colors, port, print manager, desktop....all the way to midi but no 386enh. For some reason, apparently the Tandy 4000 SCSI doesn't seem to enable this feature. But alas it is an old machine and perhaps the pentium 75dx4 with 16 meg and cd-rom and 1 gig disk is waiting out there for me to adopt it. Thanks again for your help. Bart -*- 23507 9MAR95-2044 General Information RE: 4000 SCSI, where is 386enh icon? (Re: Msg 23499) From: BARTONO To: MISAL Thanks for your reply. Any suggestions what I might try since the software I was trying to install required it for installation? "What? you have no 386enh Mode" Sorry we can't come out of our diskettes and play". - -*- 23508 10MAR95-0457 General Information RE: rgbi cm-5 monitor???? (Re: Msg 23504) From: TVDOG To: ORKIN CM-5 is a standard CGA monitor. Check any PC hardware book on that. Jeff (tvdog) -*- 23509 10MAR95-1928 General Information cga monitor!!!!! From: ORKIN To: ALL Can anyone give me the pin layout for a cga monitor? -*- 23510 11MAR95-1056 General Information RE: cga monitor!!!!! (Re: Msg 23509) From: TVDOG To: ORKIN 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 1 Ground 2 Ground 3 Red 4 Green 5 Blue 6 Intensity 7 not used 8 Horizontal sync 9 Vertical sync* *=active low. Jeff (tvdog) -*- 23511 11MAR95-2358 M -*- 23516 15MAR95-2318 T1000/1200/3000 RE: DeskMate (Re: Msg 23477) From: GLENTZ To: WGMISKELL (NR) I have several older versions of deskmate that could be put on 360K discs. The version that came with my 1000SX is on 360K, 5 1/4 in floppies. Let me know if you still need it. I will try to get it to you. Greg Lentz(GLENTZ) -*- 23517 17MAR95-2025 T1000/1200/3000 RE: upgrade Tandy 1000 TX (Re: Msg 23515) From: WESF To: GLENTZ Ok, thanks...I have an 8 bit SCSI that has an on-board BIOS...it is a Seagate ST-01. Will only handle drives less than 100 megs... Wesley -*- 23518 31MAR95-1854 General Information anybody alive??? From: WESF To: ALL Is anyone alive here? Not a message for a week now. Who's got some computer questions, I want to be challenged... Wesley -*- 23519 31MAR95-1918 T1000/1200/3000 Tandy 1000 TX From: AFRAYLING To: ALL We are looking for assistance to get a Tandy Hardcard working with a Tandy 1000TX. The Hardcard was purchased 4 years ago and has never worked. It is a standard western digital controller. The computer refuses to recognize that it is there and there seems to be no CMOS or setup in which to describe the drive and its parameters. If anyone knows how to tdo this or has the appropriate setup program could you please post it to the database and leave a message Thank you -*- 23521 31MAR95-2259 T1000/1200/3000 RE: Tandy 1000 TX (Re: Msg 23519) From: TVDOG To: AFRAYLING The Tandy 1000TX has no CMOS, or, what is more common on the 1000-series, EEPROM. There is no setup program for it. Like other old PC-compatibles, DIP switches and jumpers on the motherboard are used for system configuration. There are two versions of the TX motherboard. In both cases, there is a bank of 4 switches. The "Cleburn" version of the motherboard has an additional bank of 2 switches. On the standard, non-Cleburn version, DIP switch 2 swaps IRQ 2 and 5. By default, the TX uses IRQ 2 for the hard drive and IRQ 5 for the video; IBM standard is the opposite. Thus DIP switch 2 must be turned OFF for a standard hard drive controller to be used. I'm not clear on whether this works in the Cleburn version. Some controllers can be configured with jumpers to use IRQ 2 instead of IRQ 5. Check with Western Digital on that. The WD1004, WD1002A-WX1, and WD1002S-WX2 were capable of being configured in this manner. I assume this is an 8-bit controller. Also note that, again like other old computers (those that take 8-bit controllers), there is no onboard BIOS support for hard drives in the TX. The controller must provide a BIOS. There is thus no question of configuring the BIOS for the drive; in that way it is simpler than for newer systems. I hope this is helpful. There are undoubtedly TX owners out there with more specific (or more correct ;-) information. It would be helpful to tell us what type of drive it is (IDE, MFM, RLL, ESDI, SCSI). Check out the DIP switch settings mentioned above and let us know. Jeff (tvdog) -*-