On Tue, 11 May 2021,
richard...@gmail.com wrote:
> Yesterday I dug it (IBM Wheelwriter 30 Series II Model 6787) out
> again and loaded the latest firmware with the build option for 30
> series and everything worked. The only problem this time saw that
> some of the flex connectors needed a bit of a wiggle to get them
> fully operational, I expect this was due to them being the
> alternative fine pitch flex cables.
I suggest that you buy a pair of the good flat flex cables with wide
conductors made by Wavelink as listed in the parts list. The folks at
Wavelink were gracious enough to make a production run of 25 sets to
hold as stock and I'd like to keep that business active. The ZIF
connectors on the WW 30 S II have a much narrower contact surface than
the LIF connectors on the WW 1000.
> The mode 6787 is a little different from the versions described in
> the build guide, mine is a wide carriage version and it has two
> circuit boards and also a LCD display. There is very little room
> under the keyboard for the interface card, Using a spare board I may
> build another with low profile parts to try and get a better
> fit. Everything is looking good so the next task is to properly fit
> the sockets to the back panel.
I have a Wheelwriter 30 Series II Model 6787-001 that I picked up from
a curbside discard pile. I put one of my old serial interface boards
into it just to see if it would work, and found that it did. The
installation was actually easier because I just needed to attach the
interface board to the plastic cover over the typewriter's logic
boards. I may have needed to drill one hole to fit the screw
spacing. See the attached photo.
As you note, the problem is that the vertically oriented power and
RS232 connectors would hit. My test used a Rev. 1.7 board that
doesn't have the RS232 circuitry, so no problem with that connector,
but for the power I used a couple of separate jumper wires that I
could bend over so they don't stick up any further than the connector
pins.
Both the 10-pin RS232 connector and the 2-pin power connector are
available as right-angle (horizontal) versions as well, which would
solve the height problem nicely. The only bad part is that for both
of them the index key on the connector would then be opposite of what
it is for the way I designed the vertical parts to be installed. That
means the mapping of signals to pins needs to be inverted, so if you
made cables to fit the board with vertical connectors and then plugged
them into a board with right-angle connectors the wiring would be
wrong. That would be particularly bad on the power connector!
I gave some thought to designing another revision of the board with
the connector orientation flipped so either the vertical or
right-angle connectors could be used, but then there would need to be
a different version of the instructions to go with that board and ...
-- Steve