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Bendix Keyboard/Control Panel from NASA
Posted: 19 Nov 2016, 02:52
by snuci
Posted: 19 Nov 2016, 06:30
by Ratfink
NASA, eh? Better get it working with modern computers so you can play Kerbal Space Program with it.
Really cool board. I've love to see it after a good cleaning.
Posted: 19 Nov 2016, 16:54
by livingspeedbump
I know you have warehouses full of keyboards

...
...but this may be my favorite one from you yet, just because of the history. I wonder if you can find out more on exactly what it was used for.
Posted: 19 Nov 2016, 19:05
by snuci
Thanks for the comments. I'll keep looking to see what I can figure out. I am particularly thrilled about finding this one because the NASA auction happened a long time ago and I asked the seller of another item if they had anything interesting and he mentioned this. It was a total fluke of luck.
I think for this year of posting keyboards, it may be a toss up between this and the
MacCharlie keyboard extension which others seem to think is interesting too. The MacCharlie I've had for quite a while but this one came out of nowhere and is a treasure.
Posted: 21 Nov 2016, 16:41
by seebart
While your MacCharlie is really nice this is historical, very impressive!
Posted: 24 Nov 2016, 00:18
by snuci
The clean up is coming along pretty well so far. I can't take decent pics until the weekend due to no decent light but this is the first time I've done the three step wax method on a keyboard

Posted: 27 Nov 2016, 14:35
by snuci
Posted: 27 Nov 2016, 15:01
by ohaimark
It uses AMD chips.
I assume you used automotive wax on it?
Posted: 27 Nov 2016, 15:14
by livingspeedbump
This looks museum quality all cleaned up. Such an interesting piece of history.
Posted: 27 Nov 2016, 15:23
by ohaimark
I just spoke with my stepfather, who trained to be an astronaut and often used equipment from that era, about this edifice.
In his opinion, it's basically an early KVM switch.
Posted: 27 Nov 2016, 15:53
by snuci
ohaimark wrote: I assume you used automotive wax on it?
Yes, Meguiars' paint cleaner, polish and wax. The paint was so dry that cleaning it with normal cleaners left streaks.
ohaimark wrote: In his opinion, it's basically an early KVM switch.
Yes, technically it would be a "KV" (no M for mouse) but I don't believe it was a keyboard for typing words or commands because there is no Enter key. I think it's a big keypad and monitor controller but there are also millimeter keys which I don't quite understand.
Posted: 27 Nov 2016, 16:25
by ohaimark
There actually is an enter key... It's just in an odd location. That may have been intentional, as hitting enter prematurely in a NASA program could have dire consequences.
The millimeter keys are quite confusing given America's obsession with inches. Maybe it stands for something else, even if that is doubtful. Maybe a hardware control for whatever it was attached to?
Posted: 27 Nov 2016, 19:36
by snuci
ohaimark wrote: The millimeter keys are quite confusing given America's obsession with inches. Maybe it stands for something else, even if that is doubtful. Maybe a hardware control for whatever it was attached to?
I thought that the US military has always been metric or at least for a while now. I am I correct or incorrect?
Posted: 27 Nov 2016, 21:46
by snuci
Last thing on this one... the key switches. They are Clare Pendar but it's not 100% certain they are S840 series switches. These have some unique facets to it including dual contacts (perhaps for redundancy?) and gold cross point contacts. Here are some pics:
Switch facing to the left (triangle faces up usually):
These key switches are PCB mounted but the corner switches are enclosed in a cubic stabilizer unit that strengthens the edges from buckling.
Here are the key switch parts including the internal spring
Here you can see the dual set of gold cross point contacts and the pins underneath:

Posted: 27 Nov 2016, 21:54
by ohaimark
I think it only started using metric measurements in the 70s. They used SI units in joint military operations before that, but it wasn't the norm.
NASA was actually more stubborn than the US military.
http://www.space.com/3332-nasa-finally-metric.html