Saturday, May 4, 2013

Miida Stereo 52mm primary lens



view

This is an adapter which can be threaded onto the front of a lens with a 52mm filter size.

photo in the kitchen to test
another view for a quick test

Here is the caption from a listing for another adapter

Miida Universal Stereo Adapter for 35mm SLR
Offered for your consideration is this remarkable Miida Universal Stereo Adapter Model SA-1 made by Marubeni-Iida, circa 1971. It is almost identical in appearance to a famous brand of Stereo Adapter that is now highly sought-after by many stereographers around the world. The female threaded screw mount is designed to fit any lens with 52mm male threads. Ring adapters may accomodate some other sizes (a 55mm adapter is included). It is designed for use with 35mm film SLR cameras only! Any other use would be strictly for experimental purposes.
According to the instructions, the Miida Universal Stereo Adapter is supposed to work with any lens, provided the focal length is from 55-300mm. However, I never had any luck using it with my standard issue 58mm lens. (Perhaps the acceptance angle of my lens is too wide?) Since I'm primarily interested in stereo photography, I never got a different lens for my SLR just so this SA-1 would work with it. I use my "real" stereo cameras, instead. For all I know, the Miida Universal Stereo Adapter may need to be adjusted (internally) by a professional or someone who has the know-how to do that.
I found this Miida Universal Stereo Adapter at an estate sale many years ago. The original owner's daughter (who sold it to me) knew little of its history but it appears to have some tiny screws replaced (that don't fit exactly right) and one missing. A small brass nut is visible at the bottom of the left lens (see images #1 and #3.). It probably fell from the back of one of these screws but it does not move or rattle. These replacement screws do not affect the operation at all; it's just something I thought I should note Perhaps the original screws were misplaced when someone tried to clean the mirrors? I don't know. Also, t appears to be a small disc cover (the size of a US nickel) missing from the bottom of the unit. These things are detailed in the photo illustrations (#6 and #7). T's a slight "rattle" when it's shaken but this stops when the diaphragm knob is turned. It does not seem to be caused by the mirrors; rather, it seems to be the diaphragm curtain making this ever-so-slight noise. The mirrors appear to be bright and clear with no obvious scratches.







Tuesday, April 23, 2013

LIGHTWAVE COMMUNICATIONS SCS 1620 SECURE CONSOLE SERVER

This seems to be a device implemented with a 486 integrated part, and intel architecture.  It has 16 uarts + networking to make a term server.

The system boots off of a 128mb CF part.  Possibly embedded linux.  Will have to dig out a CF dongle and image the part.

Looks like after some searching that the chip might be similar to this
http://www.zfmicro.com/zfx86.html
The zfmicro people seem to be the ones who had the machZ chip used in this sytem.  The part dates to around 2000 when linux was just starting to climb into legitimacy.

Look like the documentation for the SCS 1620 is here for now.  Will have to archive it for future use.

http://www.lantronix.com/support/discontinued.html

It appears that Lantronix had a line of bridging gizmos around the time of the MachZ part's intro, which did things like ethernet to serial, and the like.  This is such a product with a specific use.


Compact Flash and network chip

Processor

System Ram

Some sort of flash (bios?)

16 ports worth of serial I/O shifters



near the modem slot, maybe an ISA I/O chip?

Power on board

Overall.  Dual P/S are nice

rear edge view.

idiot blacked out info.  16 ports, net, serial common port

Power supplies

Flash chip for the system Version 03.12


Legend next to some jumpers and ports

More options

and more options plus crystals






Front panel board




Main processor MachZ X86 PC

THE Power Solutions


AJ-040U-D10-010