I've posted about it on Mastodon, but I recently finally got a Lear Siegler ADM-3A dumb terminal from a seller on eBay! Owning one of these has been sort of a lifelong dream of mine ever since, as a kid, I saw one featured on the cover of an old kids' science book, Young Scientist's Space and Technology. Something about it really captured me, and when I was a little older I was able to learn more about the terminal online. I actually bought a non-working ADM-5 terminal when I was in high school from a seller on Craigslist, but as I was beyond inexperienced with electronics at the time and had very little in the way of tools or skills I was never able to fix it. I still have it, and still plan on fixing it at some point (in fact I have a page on this very Gopher Hole about my ideas to retrofit a RPi and modern keyboard inside of it), but it's definitely going to require a massive overhaul. When I first got it all of the characters on the display were just blocks and it didn't seem to respond to any input at all, so it's likely more than a simple RAM issue. 2102 SRAM chips are also fairly expensive (at least for a large quantity) and in my limited experience aren't very hardy, so it's going to be a while before I touch it again. The video board needs recapping and one of the voltage regulators is completely missing thanks to younger me. Eventually I'll get around to it. As far as the ADM 3A goes, they've gone up in price on eBay massively in the past two years. Even non-working units can sell for upwards of $700, which is insane. I lost an auction for a working one, and aggravted with this I set a max bid of $800 on the next one that became available, tired of continuously putting off the purchase, especially when they certainly weren't getting any cheaper or easier to find. Thankfully I actually won the auction for around $630. The pictures looked like they were taken using a potato, which was fitting since it'd be shipping from Ireland, and the condition was listed as non-working, so I wasn't completely sure what to expect. The seller asked for a few details for the customs slip a few hours after I ordered it and then shipped it the next day. To my shock there was a package from Dublin on my back porch two days later, the terminal having arrived sooner than even some of my very much so domestic Amazon purchases. I brought it into my house and set the box on my kitchen floor, just hoping that it had made it here in good condition. And it had! It was dusty as all could get, both inside and outside, and the end of the power cord was badly frayed, but it seemed like the picture tube itself was in good shape and nothing seemed damaged. I got it all cleaned up with paper towels, water, a magic eraser, and some rubbing alcohol, and I managed to redo the European plug (so wonderfully designed and serviceable that a jealous sigh penetrates my thoughts even writing about it). After that I had to wait for a 240V transformer to arrive to do anything further with it, so I set it up in my living room to let it wait. I actually did notice, in the meantime, that the metal plate in the CRT assembly which holds the flyback transformer had actually come loose from its mount, and I thanked my stars that it hadn't resulted in damage to the neck of the tube. Once my transformer arrived, I went to test turning on the machine, but unfortunately it didn't power on. I grabbed my multimeter and double checked that the internal fuse was still good (I'd already checked the fuse on the plug itself when I'd repaired it before), and everything seemed to check out. After some probing, all signs pointed to the power switch, which had seemed a bit off in its action and in fact had had some strange green substance appear on the sides of the button. I noted what color leads went where and pulled it out to see if it was fixable. I popped it apart and sure enough the entire inside of it was filled with green goo -- a mixture of old leaked plasticizer and copper corrosion, at least according to my guesses and the internet. I spent a good while trying to clean all the goo out of it, going between manual cleaning with a brush and some funky sonic magic with an old ultrasonic jewelery cleaner I had in the closet. I let it completely dry overnight, and the next day still had a bit of goo to pick out with a toothpick before reassembly. Once reassembled, the switch was nice and clicky and tactile, and once back in the terminal it finally let power through. The machine began buzzing to life, and then within a few seconds I watched one of the power transistors flash blue right in front of me and start smoking. I turned the machine off quickly, and a few minutes later turned it back on without any further complication. No idea what that was all about, as the transistor still seemed to work and tested OK with a very basic multimeter diode test, but whatever. There were instead two pressing issues with the terminal, which were that half of all the lines were simply blocks (a memory issue) and also the brightness on the CRT was turned up too much, leaving a whitish background instead of a black one and an artifact from the scanning motion of the electron gun. The metal piece that had been dislodged before had actually damaged the brightness pot on the video board, so that had to be replaced, meaning I'd have to pull out the CRT. I ordered all the stuff I knew I'd need (both to discharge the CRT and replace the pot and chips) and kept waiting. All the things for the video board arrived first, as I was able to order them all from Amazon. I went a bit overboard and bought some insulated gloves for electrical applications, but also did the reasonable thing and bought some good alligator clips for attaching to the screwdriver I'd have to stick into the anode cap to discharge everything. Thursday night I got everything together, pulled out the tube and the boards, and managed to desolder and resolder in the 100Kohm brightness pot while listening to an audiobook. It took three or four hours, but after the reassembly, I was able to correctly adjust the brightness of the display. On Saturday my 2102 SRAM chips and 16 pin sockets got here, but since me and Paul were going to see Suzume in theaters that day, I put the terminal on the backburner. On Sunday I continued listening to my audiobook and spent a full four hours desoldering the existing chips and soldering on sockets for the new ones, promising myself that from then on I'd say to hell with it and use chipquick to remove ICs as surely it had to be less painful than trying and failing to suck up all the solder with a desoldering gun time and time again. Either way, once fully reassembled I was still having issues, although the character output was different than the blocks I'd seen before. I played around with the chips for a bit before replacing them all again with more that I had in the tube of them I'd bought, and thankfully that worked. I put all the ones I had (including the ones I'd desoldered previously) back into the plastic tube to test later with an Arduino whether they were good or bad. Either way I'd now had a fully working ADM 3A terminal!! I am actually using it now to write this very post, and my fingers are a bit tired from the pretty heavy mechanical keys it has lol. It's really fulfilling to have a project come together like this, and I'm really happy to finally have this terminal as a part of my collection. The keyboard layout is a bit weird, so I don't know how much I'll use it as a Linux terminal as opposed to my VT320, but I'm definitely going to be using it with my Altair for an authentic experience. It's great, and I love it! Also at some point I may go into some more detail, but I also got a Cricut so that I could make a somewhat faithful recreation of the Lear Siegler coverplate which was missing from my terminal (and many others like it). I used some high quality scans from the S100Computing Google Group and black vinyl and aluminum sheet metal to bring it all together. I'd intended to paint it blue like the particular version of the coverplate I was copying, but the black and silver aesthetic really was much nicer to me than I would have otherwise imagined. Anyway, pictures are available on my Mastodon! Sorry for not posting more on Gopher! There are phlogs which I tried to write but ended up quitting halfway through, so it's been a while since I've actually put anything out there, but hopefully this post will be useful or enjoyable to someone! I hope everyone is doing well! Until next time! :>