T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3061.1 | Seated properly? | SCASS1::TERPENING | | Tue Dec 12 1995 08:39 | 2 |
| Are the modules properly seated and the latch fully closed? The problem
you discribed happens often when the modules are not seated properly.
|
3061.2 | Customer said yes | KERNEL::WARDJO | | Mon Dec 18 1995 05:13 | 8 |
|
The customer has said he is inserting the modules correctly & pushing
the catch down. He sees this as a design problem, but I am not convinced
he is inserting the modules correctly & was wondering if anyone else is
seeing this or if it is a problem just for this customer.
Jon
|
3061.3 | | STRWRS::KOCH_P | It never hurts to ask... | Mon Dec 18 1995 07:41 | 9 |
|
Well, occassionally the handle on the DEChub 900 don't always engage
but just a slight pressure seats the handle which engages the
microswitch. However, this is only when I lift the handle. Having my
own demo gear, I literally slam the unit into place and the handle
always engage.
I think the only way engineering might see what you are talking about
is to videotape the customer doing it and sending in the tape.
|
3061.4 | Try straightening out the lever instead of "slamming" | NETCAD::BATTERSBY | | Tue Dec 19 1995 09:06 | 23 |
| I have watched people "slam" units into the HUB (much to my
dismay). It doesn't take too much of this "slamming" before
the result is bent pins on some of the modules, or cracked
and broken connector shrouds. I personally don't advocate the
"slamming" approach. Yes I know Ma Bell designed the telephone
such that people (frustrated by a busy signal at the other end),
can "slam" the receiver down and not have to worry about breaking
the phone, but I'd prefer to see a less aggressive approach to
installing modules in a HUB backplane. Try plugging the module
in a gentler fashion, and then try repeated "snaps" of the little
guillotine latch to get the module to power up. Failing this take
the module, hold the end of the module with the little lever near
your ear so you can hear the "click" of the microswitch as you press
down on the lever. If the "click" isn't heard until almost the end
or at the end of the physical travel of the lever, then the lever
must be straightened out a little so that the curved end of the
lever will make contact with the bottom edge of the guillotine latch
sooner in its travel. This is usually the source of the problem. That
is the curved end of the lever is bent too much, and needs a little
subtle straightening out.
Bob
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3061.5 | | STRWRS::KOCH_P | It never hurts to ask... | Tue Dec 19 1995 10:23 | 14 |
|
OK, but I've had my units for well over 1 yr now and they regularly
take a beating. I've heard of one sales rep who take a DECrepeater
900TM out of a demo hub, jumps up and down on it and then replaces it
into the hub and shows the customer how it powers up.
The modules are built like tanks. It's one of the edges we have in the
marketplace by demonstrating our superior module engineering. I use to
carry my modules around in a cardboard box until I found these real
nice Rubbermaid storage containers.
I agree that a less agressive approach might work for this problem, but
the sales end of this requires an agressive, push it as far as you can,
approach to demonstrate why Digital engineering is the best.
|
3061.6 | To each their own..... | NETCAD::BATTERSBY | | Tue Dec 19 1995 11:06 | 7 |
| Oh I don't mind the standing on them and jumping up & down on
them. The box is built to take a certain amount of that. :-)
I'm more concerned about the fragility of the plastic around the
connectors, and bending pins when "slamming" a module while taking
one eyes off what one is doing.
Bob :-)
|
3061.7 | Thanks for the advice... | KERNEL::WARDJO | | Thu Dec 21 1995 04:26 | 12 |
| Thanks for all the replies,
I don't think I will advocate the customer jumps up & down on his modules
or slams them into the hub.
As I have not actually witnessed him inserting them, I cannot be sure if
he is doing anything wrong. Perhaps he has been unlucky in having
several modules where the switch only just engaged.
Thanks again,
Jon
|