MikeG wrote:So is the speed sensor inside the motor?
It's a circuit board on the motor and it reads a plate attached to the motor spindle - under the black plastic cover. If you look at the troubleshooting, there is a section that talks about realigning the plate to the sensor. The sensor is an infrared pickup that is looking for some binary indictor (not sure if it's paint, finish, scratches, or what) on the rotating disc. So it is effectively counting RPMs.
The motor has two connectors - a thin 5-wire set for the sensor, and a heavier gauge set that drives the motor.
Those connect to what ShopSmith calls the "Power Supply," but I'm about 99.9% sure has all the brains as well. That conencts by another thin wire to the control panel/display. Power is conected via another set of cables.
MikeG wrote:My Fortran was on punch cards. I don't remember a version number.
Nice! I played with used punch cards when I was a kid, but by the time I was old enough to get my hands on a computer, they were gone. It's hard to beleive that we now have gigabytes of storage on cell phones, gigabytes of memory on PCs, and terabytes of storage on home NAS devices. What hapended to terse code that exectured in 8 kilobytes of working memory? Now everything sucks up all the room it can.