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Conference koolit::vms_curriculum

Title:VMS Curriculum
Moderator:SUPER::MARSH
Created:Thu Nov 01 1990
Last Modified:Sun Aug 25 1996
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:185
Total number of notes:2026

121.0. "While the Iron Is HOT!!! (Operator TBI)" by SUPER::REGNELL (Modularity Maven) Wed Jan 22 1992 10:25

    
    HELP!!!
    
    Now that I have your attention [or at least a tiny bit of it...]
    
    We are in the process of writing the TBI for this Operator course.
    We have found [thanks for your comments on the lecture lab] that
    the chapter on hardware maintenance is basically content-free. [sigh]
    
    I am breaking precedent here and asking that anyone who has time
    or inclination might take a look at the new TBI chapter [which is
    also content-free at this point] and suggest:
    
    	Organization
    	Detailed task-oriented content
    	Specific labs that you might share
    	Lists of operator duties
    	A breakdown on what an Operator should do and when they should
    		call for assistance
    
    I realise that this will be of indirect benefit to you folks...you
    will not be teaching the OPERATOER TBI in class...however...any new
    organization/content we come up with will be reflected in the
    next release of the Operator LL...and the TBI can provide you
    with selected handouts to augment the LL now.
    
    Please keep in mind that we _are_ striving to be hardware independant.
    
    Thanks in advance...
    
    Oh yes...do not be polite...it is not necessary...we know the
    chapter as it stands is ...ahhh... ?poor? 
    
    Mel
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121.1Where it is [sigh]SUPER::REGNELLModularity MavenWed Jan 22 1992 10:296
    
    Right...you should know where it is...[picky!]
    
    SUPER::ES$REVIEW:[OPERATOR_TBI]oper_hardware_errors.ps
    
    
121.2Is this what your looking for??TEACH::CHUCKTue Feb 18 1992 19:5961
    Mel,
    
    	Did you get the copy of old chapter 9 from the old oper course.
    It should give an idea for this topic. (I discussed this in note
    7).  I sent it to you about 3 weeks ago.  
    
    	Another place to get this type of information is the the hardware
    operator guide or hardware manual for each device.  In the front
    of these type books they usually list customer responsibility and
    frequence of P.M. items.
    
    	Because this chapter is "content free" I usually tell a lot
    of "sea stories" about my hardware days.  Most stories are real
    and they lead to a moral-usually if the customer had not screwed
    up there would be no story.
    
    
    		example (true):
    
    	I used to work for CDC.  They had hugh data centers with many
    large super computers and large disks.  I was the grounding coordinator
    for the DC area.  I had to go in and make sure the their system
    was properly grounded at the data center in Rockville.  They had
    nine mainframe systems.  We checked all devices to the system ground.
    We used noise generators to try to make the devices fail and if
    the grounds were not proper they would have.
         
    	Each device ground dropped directly to the grid ground under
    the floor.  Copper wire crossing every 2 feet.  The room was about
    the size of a football field.  We used a Meager to test the continuity
    to earth ground outside.  No connection.  With the system manager
    we followed the connection from the grid ground to the power room.
    Saw that it was connected to a water pipe.  The pipe went outside
    and into the ground.  Should have worked, right?  It did not work
    because the ground wire from the grid was just tied to the water
    pipe with a "half hitch" knot.  No solid connection at all.  We
    clamped it to the pipe and all was OK.
    
    
    	Earlier CDC had a sight about the same size in Germany.  In
    place of the grid ground was a copper plate under the whole floor.
    The wire to ground went outside to an existing pipe into the earth
    ground and checked out well.
    
    	They forgot to look at the pipe to see what else was connected
    to it.  One day there was a storm and the system went down.  The
    pipe was connected to a lightning rod. It hit and blew enough modules
    in the many systems to require an air lift of 3 planes to bring in
    the spares.     
    
    	Moral: The customer is responsible to make sure the enviornment
    is correct and if it is not there can be catistrofic(?) results.
    
    
    Hope some of this helps.
                  
    You're in Mass. There should be some really good support techs there
    to help.  I recommend Jerry Harrigan If he hasnt been riffed yet.
    
    
    Chuck Naughton 
121.3...scuffle, scuffle...HARDY::REGNELLModularity MavenWed Feb 19 1992 20:1922
    
    Hi Chuck,
    
    Yup...I got it...thanks. [I must admit I had a time figuring out
    who sent it though...thanks for letting me know...]
    
    And...[sigh]...we sort of gave up. But I did file the stuff away
    for the next go-round. We are trying not to be hardware specific...
    and not to get into the legal hassles inherent in 'The book said to..'
    and I folded to deadline pressure and just winged it out of here.
    
    Not real happy with that decision, but it seemed the lesser of
    several evils at the time.
    
    In the meantime...my ID _will not forget_ and with him around, _I_
    will not be able to forget....so we will attack it next time.
    
    BUT...kudos and thanks to you!!! You were the only instructor
    anywhere anyhow that even bothered to respond! I was impressed!
    
    Mel
    
121.4Thank You!TEACH::CHUCKFri Feb 21 1992 01:1311
    In note 7 I said I would send it so I did not bother sending a note
    with it.  Always glad to put my 2 cents in.  As with all of us there
    is not time to respond to or make comments on everything I would
    like.  You see, there are all these new courses we are studying
    for.  If I wasn't doing that I would have time to...? what a minute.
    If there were no new courses.  Then no notes to answer.  ?Hey! I
    would then have the time.  I'm so confused
    
    Til next time, Chuck.
    
    P.S.  I did put my Name on the lower left corner of the env. 
121.5You did????SUPER::REGNELLModularity MavenTue Feb 25 1992 20:0810
    
    I'm gonna go bakc and check the envelope! I looked!
    
    [Of course, if I had taken off the blinders, it might have
    been easier...]
    
    Thanks again...
    
    Mel