Thanks for the suggestions guys!
The computer is intended to look like it came out of the early 20th century
with visible wires, interconnects in wooden cabinets!
For a brief example, a module has a deep brown stained wooden facade with
an etched brass control panel filled with plenty of buttons, toggle
switches and neon.
As for the progress on the functionality, it's slow but steady. Most of the
ALU functions are either built or designed and ready to be built along with
the registers and some of the RAM. It should be capable of about as much as
the little man computer by the first working prototype. I'd quite like to
make it capable of controlling a stack but that may be quite far into the
future.
I have indeed noticed the IN-3s start to flicker after a while, in fact one
or two were flickery straight out of the box. If they are as unreliable as
Paul suggests I may buy a second box.
I do intend to go for a 'steampunk'-esque theme so the wire supports may be
an appropriate solution for the IN-3s, though I'll have to experiment to
get it to look nice. A quick test proved the wire is rigid enough to hold
the pinched end of the tube and spiral down over the wires like a spring to
hide or at least obscure them. My local electronics shop sells grommets
with strain reliefs cheaply and they fit over the nipples of the tubes and
obviously can be mounted in a hole drilled into the brass ceiling of the
cavity in the cabinet for the tubes.
Paul you may be onto something with those grommets to hold the ins-1s, The
6mm grommets I mentioned with the strain reliefs hold them really snuggly!
Thanks for that suggestion!
I have a few old Cambion DIP sockets that I got for pennies when a local
factory went bust that seem to work l but sadly I don't have enough for all
the bulbs and they cost a fortune on ebay. The modern ic sockets are a bit
brutal on anything you put into them so I much prefer the cambions for old
delicate ICs, they're fantastic little sockets, it's a shame they're out of
production now!
[image:
http://www.surplussalespa.com/catalog/images/703-4051-01-0316.JPG]
On to some good news!
I tried using screw terminals and that proved to be rather successful. Also
as it turns out, corrugated cardboard is really handy. I'll try and get a
picture later of them lit up if I can put a temporary base together by then.
Thanks to both of you for the help!