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Model M Question

Posted: 16 Jul 2019, 13:44
by RBithrey
Hey all,

Just a small question for all you lovely people - I'm trawling around on eBay on my usual Model M hunt and this cropped up:

https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/392336002007 - it seems pretty odd, and when searching up the model code on a spreadsheet I found, there's no real matches.

It looks like it's from a terminal, but I've got no real clue as to where this has come from.

Any help would be wonderful.

Thanks,

Reece.

Re: Model M Question

Posted: 16 Jul 2019, 13:45
by RBithrey
Also, just to clarify, this is a broken board.

Re: Model M Question

Posted: 16 Jul 2019, 13:49
by Muirium
I had (a fully working) one quite like it:

Image
viewtopic.php?f=62&t=6407

Broken how? It might just need Soarer’s converter for its terminal protocol, or indeed simply a regular PS/2 Model M controller board swap.

Re: Model M Question

Posted: 16 Jul 2019, 13:51
by RBithrey
I mean, the listing is a corporate one if that makes any difference, and just reading the listing, it says they couldn't get hold of a converter to test it.

It looks in pretty good nick to be honest.

Re: Model M Question

Posted: 16 Jul 2019, 14:16
by depletedvespene
RBithrey wrote: 16 Jul 2019, 13:44
Just a small question for all you lovely people - I'm trawling around on eBay on my usual Model M hunt and this cropped up:

https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/392336002007 - it seems pretty odd, and when searching up the model code on a spreadsheet I found, there's no real matches.

It looks like it's from a terminal, but I've got no real clue as to where this has come from.
You must be pretty new into this hobby, because the keyboard you link to is one of the most common terminal Model M keyboards out there; it's quite notorious because of the graphics on the numpad, too; the part number is 1392595, a number almost as common as 1391401.

Anyhoo, its RJ-45 plug is a tell-tale sign of it being a terminal model. So is the fact that there are two 1U keys where the numpad+ would go if this was a PC keyboard. The legends are clearly for terminals (although, at the very least, the caps in the numpad look like replacements). Finally, the listing itself says "Part of a POS terminal set up previously, …".




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