Hi Mike, Yes, the 8086 does seem to be the likeliest candidate. I shall let folks know the results. I do have an original Fluke adapter sub-pod somewhere that is designed to go between a pod and another cpu socket, looks like a regular pod but empty and a ribbon cable ending in a 40 pin DIP plug, you just wire it up for the new CPU. John :-#)# On 04/12/2016 8:20 AM, Mike Coates wrote:
nearest to it is probably the 8086 since that already multiplexes the address and data lines (ad0-ad15).
On 12 April 2016 at 15:48 John Robertson <jrr@flippers.com> wrote:
Has anyone here figured out an adapter for one of the Fluke 9010 pods to be able to emulate the multiplexed address and data lines of the T11? I am just starting to look at this as I need to access these lines to service an old video game board that used the T11 as the main processor. Any of you not familiar with the DEC-T11 it is a 40 pin device that emulates a PDP11 as far as I can understand.
I don't know anything about the PDP11 technically though so am pretty much hacking my way through inventing a troubleshooting procedure, which the manufacturer of the game - Atari (System 2, Paperboy, AFB, etc,) - did not provide.
Just flinging this out in the hopes someone here can help.
Thanks,
John :-#)# -- How to subscribe or unsubscribe from TTL http://seven.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/techtoolslist _______________________________________________ Techtoolslist mailing list Techtoolslist@flippers.com https://pairlist7.pair.net/mailman/listinfo/techtoolslist FTP site is: ftp://ttl.arcadetech.org/TTL/Test_Equipment Archive site: http://seven.pairlist.net/pipermail/techtoolslist/
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