Difference between revisions of "Personal DECstation 5000/25"
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File:ds5000-badge.jpg|Front badge | File:ds5000-badge.jpg|Front badge | ||
File:ds5000.jpg|Front view | File:ds5000.jpg|Front view | ||
+ | File:ds5000-clock.jpg|DS1287 clock chip | ||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Notes == | ||
+ | The Personal DECstation 5000/25 entered my collection some time around 2005 when it came with some other machines. It was immediately relegated to storage because of the fact that it wasn't a VAX. | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''2013/03:''' After reading about DEC's Ultrix operating system, and remembering this machine in storage, I decided to put it on the bench and see what is going on. Upon powering up, I soon discover that the Dallas DS1287 clock chip has failed. Unfortunately, it's soldered to the motherboard. It lives just below the CPU card, and there's no clearance to install a socket, so the replacement will have to be soldered in. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Other than the clock chip, the machine appears to be in good health. All other self tests pass. I am able to pass a boot string and get the hard drive to boot up. The operating system complains of a missing (second) drive and drops to single-user mode. From here, I was able to grab the /etc/passwd file and pass it through John the Ripper to decrypt the passwords. |
Latest revision as of 18:21, 11 March 2013
Configuration
Machine | Personal DECstation 5000/25 |
---|---|
Model | PM30A-AA |
Serial | AB21302PPD |
Documentation
EK-PM30E-RB-003 | Personal DECstation 5000 User's Guide |
EK-PM30F-MG-004 | Personal DECstation/DECsystem 5000 Series Maintenance Guide |
Pictures
Notes
The Personal DECstation 5000/25 entered my collection some time around 2005 when it came with some other machines. It was immediately relegated to storage because of the fact that it wasn't a VAX.
2013/03: After reading about DEC's Ultrix operating system, and remembering this machine in storage, I decided to put it on the bench and see what is going on. Upon powering up, I soon discover that the Dallas DS1287 clock chip has failed. Unfortunately, it's soldered to the motherboard. It lives just below the CPU card, and there's no clearance to install a socket, so the replacement will have to be soldered in.
Other than the clock chip, the machine appears to be in good health. All other self tests pass. I am able to pass a boot string and get the hard drive to boot up. The operating system complains of a missing (second) drive and drops to single-user mode. From here, I was able to grab the /etc/passwd file and pass it through John the Ripper to decrypt the passwords.