On 2013-09-28 03:04, John Wilson wrote:
From: Bob Armstrong <bob at jfcl.com>
What can be done (non-destructive suggestions only, please) with a
VT-62? This is NOT a VT52 (although it looks like one). The VT62 is a
block mode terminal that, I think, actually speaks DDCMP. AFAIK it's
incapable of being a plain ASCII terminal unless there's some hack I'm
unaware of.
Have you tried it? I had a VT62 on my PDT-11/150 in college and I know
there was supposed to be a block mode, but it also worked fine as just a
VT52 clone, but with a speaker for keyclick/^G instead of a clacker, ESC T
switches you to reverse video and ESC U switches you back, and after column
72 there are tabs at every column. Other than that it's exactly a VT52 IIRC.
No idea if mine had been jumpered or had the ROMs switched or anything
to make it so normal. I bought it from an ex-DEC-employee (DEC dumped
a lot of the PDTs to their own employees) and I suppose it's possible
he got a special version.
I used a VT62 for more than 10 years in the late 80s and early 90s. Yes, they work exactly
as you write, John. VT52 compatible, but with a different BEL sound, and capable of
inverse video.
I wrote a termcap entry for it, but I'm not sure if I still have it around.
If they were capable of block mode, then it must be as Lee wrote, there must be a switch
somewhere inside for it. Mine worked like any asynchronous serial interface. Plain RS-232.
Not sure about any modem signals, but doubt it. Didn't run too fast. 9600 bps max
maybe?
Johnny
--
Johnny Billquist || "I'm on a bus
|| on a psychedelic
trip
email: bqt at softjar.se || Reading murder books
pdp is alive! || tryin' to stay hip" -
B. Idol
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