Vintage Keyboard Hardware Signal Capture & Emulation
Posted: 26 Mar 2017, 22:37
Please forgive my noobie question here, and if there is a more appropriate channel to post it, or if it's already being discussed elsewhere, please do direct me.
I like to restore rare vintage computers. Most of my interest revolves around items manufactured in the 1980s by Convergent Technologies.
One of the biggest problems I have is getting a rare machine, and not having the proprietary keyboard it takes. And, all of their keyboards were proprietary to their machines, dumb terminals, etc. So, when I actually find a rare keyboard for one of these rare machines, I'd like to "capture" the output signals for each key, and document the pinouts for the proprietary keyboard plug.
My goal is to use those signal captures to create a hardware keyboard emulator/adapter. The emulator/adapter would then receive signals from a modern keyboard, and "convert" the correspondingly mapped keys to the proprietary keyboard signals required by the rare vintage machine for keyboard input.
This page on my blog/site explains a little more about what I'm trying to accomplish:
http://unixpc.blogspot.com/2017/03/at-u ... oding.html
Has anyone here developed a process by which this is done? I feel I should ask before re-inventing the wheel, so to speak.
Thank you again everyone,
-AJ
http://MightyFrame.com
I like to restore rare vintage computers. Most of my interest revolves around items manufactured in the 1980s by Convergent Technologies.
One of the biggest problems I have is getting a rare machine, and not having the proprietary keyboard it takes. And, all of their keyboards were proprietary to their machines, dumb terminals, etc. So, when I actually find a rare keyboard for one of these rare machines, I'd like to "capture" the output signals for each key, and document the pinouts for the proprietary keyboard plug.
My goal is to use those signal captures to create a hardware keyboard emulator/adapter. The emulator/adapter would then receive signals from a modern keyboard, and "convert" the correspondingly mapped keys to the proprietary keyboard signals required by the rare vintage machine for keyboard input.
This page on my blog/site explains a little more about what I'm trying to accomplish:
http://unixpc.blogspot.com/2017/03/at-u ... oding.html
Has anyone here developed a process by which this is done? I feel I should ask before re-inventing the wheel, so to speak.
Thank you again everyone,
-AJ
http://MightyFrame.com